| Literature DB >> 33042859 |
Abstract
Opportunistic fungal infections are major causes of morbidity and mortality in patients with single or multiple defects in their immunity. Antifungal agents targeting the pathogen remain the treatment of choice for fungal infections. However, antifungal agents are toxic to the host mainly due to the close evolutionary similarity of fungi and humans. Moreover, antifungal therapy is ineffective in patients with immunosuppression. For this reason, there is an increased demand to develop novel strategies to enhance immune function and augment the existing antifungal drugs. In recent times, targeting the immune system to improve impaired host immune responses becomes a reasonable approach to improve the effectiveness of antifungal drugs. In this regard, immunomodulating therapeutic agents that turn up the immune response in the fight against fungal infections hold promise for enhancing the efficacy and safety of conventional antifungal therapy. In general, immunomodulating therapies are safe with decreased risk of resistance and broad spectrum of activity. In this review, therefore, clinical evidences supporting the opportunities and challenges of immunomodulation therapies in the treatment of invasive fungal infections are included.Entities:
Keywords: antifungal therapy; cellular therapy; cytokine therapy; fungal infections; immunomodulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33042859 PMCID: PMC7522196 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.00469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Clinical benefits and challenges of immunomodulating agents used in patients with fungal infections.
| Adoptive T-cell therapy | Stimulation of T-cells with antigen and infusion into the patient (Tramsen et al., | Generation of an adequate number of fungal-specific T cells with sufficient purity is challenging (Papadopoulou et al., |
| Monoclonal antibodies | Avoid toxicity risks because they are directed specifically to pathogen epitopes, reduce durations of antifungal drug treatment (Casadevall et al., | Highly specific, high production costs (Chames et al., |
| CAR T-cell therapies | T-cells are genetically modified to express CAR and provide MHC unrestricted antigen recognition (Meiliana et al., | Cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity (Kochenderfer et al., |
| Dendritic Cells (DCs) | Leads to activation of specific T-cells and secretion of cytokines and chemokines. It can be used both in immunotherapy and vaccination (Lauruschkat et al., | Cost inefficient, difficult to scale, and labor intensive (Lauruschkat et al., |
| G-CSF | Restores neutrophil counts (Wright et al., | Lineage-specific (Costa, |
| GM-CSF | Stimulates proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor cells. Enhances antimicrobial function of mature neutrophils and monocytes against fungal targets (Safdar et al., | Faster depletion, less stability and low targeting efficiency (Vanitha et al., |
| Granulocyte Transfusion | Increases neutrophil counts, augments the host's defenses and reverses the increased susceptibility to infections (Hickey and Kubes, | Limited success due to low granulocyte counts and short lifespan of granulocytes (Estcourt et al., |
| IFN-⋎ | Enhance Th1 response and augments the antifungal activity of macrophages and neutrophils (Stevens et al., | Potential to induce exacerbation of tissue inflammation, ischemia, and necrosis (Safdar et al., |
| Interleukins | Enhance Th1-mediated immunity (Winn et al., | Unintended deleterious effects (Casadevall and Pirofski, |
| M-CSF | Promotes the growth of macrophages, increases phagocytosis, chemotaxis, and secondary cytokine production in monocytes and macrophages (Kandalla et al., | In cancer patients, it may worsen disease progression by enhancing macrophage population (Medina-Echeverz et al., |
| NK cell therapy | Release soluble factors (such as IFN-γ) which mediate antifungal activity. It may have activity against a wide spectrum of fungi (Schneider et al., | As shown in malignancies, evasion from NK cells control may limit the success of NK cell therapy (Davies et al., |
| Pathogen recognition receptors (TLR and PTX3) | Recognize motifs on fungal species and induce inflammatory responses. It is useful for TLR-defective individuals (Netea et al., | Difficult for manufacturing on a commercial scale, complex and unpredictable mode of action (Zeromski et al., |
| TNF-α | Stimulates PMNs (Lauruschkat et al., | Hepatotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, and neurotoxicity after systemic administration (Lauruschkat et al., |