Abstract
With great interest we read the article by Dr Schoeneberg and colleagues regarding gender-specific differences with respect to outcome in patients with severe traumatic injury. The authors show that, apart from the acute phase after trauma, women have a more favorable trauma severity-adjusted outcome, with shorter ICU and hospital stay and lower sepsis rates [1]. However, a possible mechanism of action behind this difference was not suggested. We hypothesize that, in view of the fact that morbidity and mortality in the post-acute phase after trauma are often caused by infectious complications [2], gender differences in immunity might explain the observed differences. In the general population, women show a lower sepsis incidence compared with men. This difference may be related to a shorter and more pronounced initial innate immune response in females, as we have previously demonstrated during experimental human endotoxemia [3], resulting in more effective bacterial killing [4] and less pronounced immunoparalysis, which is increasingly recognized as the overriding immune dysfunction in sepsis [5]. In turn, this response results in decreased susceptibility towards secondary infections. As sex hormones have been suggested to play a crucial role in the observed gender difference, several trials with estrogens in trauma patients have been completed recently but are not yet published ({type:clinical-trial,attrs:{text:NCT00973674,term_id:NCT00973674}}NCT00973674; {type:clinical-trial,attrs:{text:NCT00973102,term_id:NCT00973102}}NCT00973102). A better clearance of septic foci and protection against secondary infections may thus account for the shorter ICU stay observed in women. This theory supports the currently prevailing idea that an adequate proinflammatory cytokine response is of benefit, rather than harmful, especially after the initial resuscitation phase of trauma.
Highlights
With great interest we read the article by Dr Schoeneberg and colleagues regarding gender-specific differences with respect to outcome in patients with severe traumatic injury
Women show a lower sepsis incidence compared with men. This difference may be related to a shorter and more pronounced initial innate immune response in females, as we have previously demonstrated during experimental human endotoxemia [3], resulting in more effective bacterial killing [4] and less pronounced immunoparalysis, which is increasingly recognized as the overriding immune dysfunction in sepsis [5]
This response results in decreased susceptibility towards secondary infections
Summary
With great interest we read the article by Dr Schoeneberg and colleagues regarding gender-specific differences with respect to outcome in patients with severe traumatic injury. Women show a lower sepsis incidence compared with men. This difference may be related to a shorter and more pronounced initial innate immune response in females, as we have previously demonstrated during experimental human endotoxemia [3], resulting in more effective bacterial killing [4] and less pronounced immunoparalysis, which is increasingly recognized as the overriding immune dysfunction in sepsis [5]. This response results in decreased susceptibility towards secondary infections.
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