Embracing complexity in sepsis
by Alex R.
Schuurman, Peter M. A. Sloot, W. Joost Wiersinga and Tom van der Poll
Critical Care volume 27,
Article number: 102 (2023) Published: 11
March 2023
Abstract
Sepsis involves the dynamic interplay between a pathogen,
the host response, the failure of organ systems, medical interventions and a
myriad of other factors. This together results in a complex, dynamic and
dysregulated state that has remained ungovernable thus far. While it is
generally accepted that sepsis is very complex indeed, the concepts, approaches
and methods that are necessary to understand this complexity remain
underappreciated. In this perspective we view sepsis through the lens of
complexity theory. We describe the concepts that support viewing sepsis as a
state of a highly complex, non-linear and spatio-dynamic system. We argue that
methods from the field of complex systems are pivotal for a fuller
understanding of sepsis, and we highlight the progress that has been made over
the last decades in this respect. Still, despite these considerable
advancements, methods like computational modelling and network-based analyses
continue to fly under the general scientific radar. We discuss what barriers
contribute to this disconnect, and what we can do to embrace complexity with
regards to measurements, research approaches and clinical applications.
Specifically, we advocate a focus on longitudinal, more continuous biological
data collection in sepsis. Understanding the complexity of sepsis will require
a huge multidisciplinary effort, in which computational approaches derived from
complex systems science must be supported by, and integrated with, biological
data. Such integration could finetune computational models, guide validation
experiments, and identify key pathways that could be targeted to modulate the
system to the benefit of the host. We offer an example for immunological
predictive modelling, which may inform agile trials that could be adjusted
throughout the trajectory of disease. Overall, we argue that we should expand
our current mental frameworks of sepsis, and embrace nonlinear, system-based
thinking in order to move the field forward.
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