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An explorative, prospective study in 100 healthy volunteers who will be challenged with endotoxin twice to identify SNPs and transcripts that are associated with the degree of endotoxin tolerance
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Sepsis remains the number one cause of death in the ICU and incident rates are rising. The focus of sepsis research has shifted away from the hyperinflammatory phase towards the detrimental role of immunosuppression, a phenomenon known as "sepsis-induced immunoparalysis". Because to a high level of heterogeneity and a lack of appropriate biomarkers, a much-warranted precision medicine approach is not possible. The identification of novel biomarkers for sepsis-induced immunoparalysis is also hampered by the extreme heterogeneity of the patient population. Experimental human endotoxemia is a highly standardized, controlled and reproducible model, which results in the development of endotoxin tolerance, an immunologic state capturing many hallmarks of sepsis-induced immunoparalysis. This study aims to identify genomic and transcriptomics biomarkers of endotoxin tolerance. Ultimately, this will lead to the identification of novel biomarkers for the early identification of patients who are prone to develop sepsis-induced immunoparalysis, and facilitate precision medicine for this highly vulnerable group. Primarily, the investigators aim to identify SNPs and transcripts that are associated with the degree of endotoxin tolerance. To increase the chances of success, the genomic and transcriptomic data obtained in vivo will be integrated with data obtained by a previously performed in vitro study. Secondary objectives include SNPs and transcripts associated with the inflammatory response, and epigenomic changes, metabolites, and proteins associated with the inflammatory response and the degree of endotoxin tolerance. Furthermore, the investigators will explore the role of gender and sex hormones in the inflammatory response and endotoxin tolerance, as well as the relationship between ex vivo and in vivo inflammatory responses. This is an explorative, prospective study in 100 healthy volunteers who will be challenged with endotoxin twice. The study takes place at the research unit of the department of Intensive Care Medicine of the Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen.
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110 participants in 1 patient group
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