Progressive endothelial cell damage in correlation with sepsis severity. Defibrotide as a contender.

2021 
BACKGROUND The vascular endothelium plays a key role in sepsis pathophysiology and the associated organ dysfunction. METHODS We evaluated endothelial function in an experimental in-vitro model of sepsis, using endothelial cells grown in the presence of serum from patients with septic syndromes (sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock), non-infectious systemic inflammatory response syndrome (NI-SIRS) and healthy volunteers. Experiments were performed in the absence and presence of defibrotide (DF) (100µg/mL) to evaluate its potential protective effect. RESULTS After exposure to patients' sera, there was a progressive endothelial cell activation in correlation with sepsis severity, with a proinflammatory and prothrombotic phenotype, exhibiting significantly increased expression of adhesion receptors at the surface (ICAM-1, p< 0.05 and VCAM-1, p< 0.05); higher production and release to the extracellular matrix (ECM) of Von Willebrand factor (p< 0.001); augmented thrombogenicity of the ECM towards platelets (p< 0.001); and increased phosphorylation of intracellular p38MAPK. DF prevented these changes in all groups. CONCLUSIONS Markers of endothelial damage increased progressively in association with the severity of septic syndromes. The endothelium is therefore an important therapeutic target to prevent complications of sepsis. DF shows promising potential to modulate the endothelial damage associated with sepsis and may constitute a pharmacological tool to decrease its sequelae including multiorgan failure.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    59
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []