| Literature DB >> 23973944 |
Xavier Wittebole1, Sophie De Roock2, Steven M Opal3.
Abstract
The seemingly inexorable spread of antibiotic resistance genes among microbial pathogens now threatens the long-term viability of our current antimicrobial therapy to treat severe bacterial infections such as sepsis. Antibiotic resistance is reaching a crisis situation in some bacterial pathogens where few therapeutic alternatives remain and pan-resistant strains are becoming more prevalent. Non-antibiotic therapies to treat bacterial infections are now under serious consideration and one possible option is the therapeutic use of specific phage particles that target bacterial pathogens. Bacteriophage therapy has essentially been re-discovered by modern medicine after widespread use of phage therapy in the pre-antibiotic era lost favor, at least in Western countries, after the introduction of antibiotics. We review the current therapeutic rationale and clinical experience with phage therapy as a treatment for invasive bacterial infection as novel alternative to antimicrobial chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: bacteriophage therapy; multidrug resistant pathogens; phage therapy; sepsis; septic shock
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23973944 PMCID: PMC3916379 DOI: 10.4161/viru.25991
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virulence ISSN: 2150-5594 Impact factor: 5.882
Table 1. Summary of potential beneficial effects of phage therapy
| 1. Activity against all type of bacteria including MDR-pathogens |
| 2. Narrow antibacterial spectrum allowing preservation of the existing microbiome |
| 3. Potential low level of side effects |
| 4. Wide distribution upon systemic administration |
| 5. Possible effect on the inflammatory response |
| 6. Cost effectiveness |
| 7. Improved efficacy as compared with antibiotics |
Table 2. Summary of major experimental studies with phage therapy
| Bacteria | Author | Infection model | Animal | Phage therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smith | Systemic (intramuscular injection) | Mice | Intramuscular injection | |
| Smith | Diarrhea after oral | Calves | Oral administration | |
| Soothill | I.P. injection | Mice | I.P. injection | |
| Merril | I.P. injection related systemic infection | Mice | I.P. injection | |
| Barrow | Septicemia and meningitis | Chicken and calves | Intra-muscular injection | |
| Vancomycin-resistant | Biswas | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection |
| Matsuzaki | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection | |
| Chibani-Chennoufi | Diarrhea after intestinal administration | Mice | Oral administration | |
| MDR | Vinodkumar | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection |
| Wills | Wound infection | Rabbit | Subcutaneous injection | |
| Imipenem-resistant | Wang | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection |
| Beta-lactamase producing | Wang | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection |
| Watanabe | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection | |
| MDR | Vinodkumar | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection |
| Debarbieux | Lung infection | Mice | ||
| Sunagar | I.P. injection related bacteremia | Mice | I.P. injection | |
| Hung | Intragastric administration related liver abscesses and bacteremia | Mice | Intragastric administration | |
| Kumari | Burn wound infection | Mice | Topical administration | |
| Morello | Lung Infection | Mice | Intra-nasal | |
| Thotova | Urinary tract infection | Mice | I.P. injection | |
| Alemayehu | Lung infection | Mice | Intra-nasal | |
| ESBL producing | Pouillot | I.P. injection | Rat | I.P. injection |
| MRSA | Yilmaz | Bone infection | Rat | Medullary injection |
IP, intraperitoneal; MDR, multidrug-resistant; ESBL, extended spectrum β-lactamase; MRSA, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus