| Literature DB >> 27536293 |
Callum J Cooper1, Mohammadali Khan Mirzaei1, Anders S Nilsson1.
Abstract
The global rise of multi-drug resistant bacteria has resulted in the notion that an "antibiotic apocalypse" is fast approaching. This has led to a number of well publicized calls for global funding initiatives to develop new antibacterial agents. The long clinical history of phage therapy in Eastern Europe, combined with more recent in vitro and in vivo success, demonstrates the potential for whole phage or phage based antibacterial agents. To date, no whole phage or phage derived products are approved for human therapeutic use in the EU or USA. There are at least three reasons for this: (i) phages possess different biological, physical, and pharmacological properties compared to conventional antibiotics. Phages need to replicate in order to achieve a viable antibacterial effect, resulting in complex pharmacodynamics/pharmacokinetics. (ii) The specificity of individual phages requires multiple phages to treat single species infections, often as part of complex cocktails. (iii) The current approval process for antibacterial agents has evolved with the development of chemically based drugs at its core, and is not suitable for phages. Due to similarities with conventional antibiotics, phage derived products such as endolysins are suitable for approval under current processes as biological therapeutic proteins. These criteria render the approval of phages for clinical use theoretically possible but not economically viable. In this review, pitfalls of the current approval process will be discussed for whole phage and phage derived products, in addition to the utilization of alternative approval pathways including adaptive licensing and "Right to try" legislation.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive pathways; alternative licensing; bacteriophage; phage therapy; pharmaceutical regulation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27536293 PMCID: PMC4971087 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.01209
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1FDA Novel Drug Approval 2011–2015. Data obtained from (http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DevelopmentApprovalProcess/DrugInnovation/ucm430302.htm). , Total; , anti-infective; , anti-bacterial.
Summary of current phage based products in development for the treatment of human disease.
| Micreos | Staphefekt | Endolysin | Topical | ||
| Intralytix | ShigActive | Phage | Ingested | ||
| AmpliPhi | AmpliPhage-001 | Phage | – | ||
| AmpliPhage-002 | Topical | ||||
| AmpliPhage-004 | – | ||||
| Technophage | TP-102 | Phage | – | Ulcers | |
| TP-122 | – | Respiratory | |||
| TP-132 | – | – | |||
| TP-107 | – | Topical | |||
| Pherecydes Pharma | PP021 | Phage | Burn and Skin | ||
| PP1131 PP1231 | Burn, Skin, and Respiratory tract infection | ||||
| PP2351 | Bone, Joint, and Prosthesis | ||||
| Avid Biotics | Pyocin | Phage Derived | Diarrheal and food poisoning | ||
| Avidocin | – | ||||
| Pyocin | – | ||||
| Purocin | Food poisoning | ||||
| Purocin | Food poisoning | ||||
| ContraFect | CF-301 | Phage Derived Lysins | – | ||
| CF-303 | – | ||||
| CF-304 | – | ||||
| CF-305 | – | ||||
| CF-306 | – | ||||
| CF-307 | Group B Streptococcus | – |
Information not available.
Figure 2Schematic representation of current FDA approval procedures for anti-infective drugs.
Summary of clinical trials testing requirements.
| Phase I | Determination of safety | 20–100 | • 1st in human studies using healthy volunteers |
| Phase II | Determination of efficacy | 100–500 | • Determination of efficacy in target population |
| Phase III | Confirmation of efficacy | 1000–5000 | • Verification of efficacy in target population |
| Phase IV | Safety surveillance | – | • Monitoring of routine use to ensure no adverse side effects |
Adapted from (Pocock, 1983).
Not applicable.
Current clinical trials for phage based therapy in humans.
| NCT02664740 | Standard treatment associated with phage therapy vs. placebo for diabetic foot ulcers infected by | Not yet recruiting | • Multicenter trial comparing phage impregnated dressing (107 PFU/mL) to a placebo dressing | – |
| NCT02116010 | Evaluation of phage therapy for the treatment of | Recruiting (July 2016) | • Phase I/II multicenter trial comparing phage cocktails against Silver Sulfadiazine | – |
| NCT01818206 | Bacteriophage effects on | Completed (April 2012) | • Induced sputum samples taken from 59 CF patients | Saussereau et al., |
| NCT00945087 | Experimental phage therapy of bacterial infections | Unknown (Last Updated Sept 2013) | – | |
| NCT00663091 | A prospective, randomized, double-blind controlled study of WPP-201 for the safety and efficacy of treatment of venous leg ulcers | Completed (May 2008) | • Phase I safety study evaluating an 8 phage cocktail (each phage component approx. 109 PFU/mL) | Rhoads et al., |
| NCT00937274 | Antibacterial treatment against diarrhea in oral rehydration solution | Terminated (Jan 2013) | • Comparison of 2 separate T4 phage cocktails against standard oral rehydration solutions in ETEC and EPEC infections | Sarker et al., |
Data obtained from http://www.Clinicaltrials.gov (09/03/16).
Not applicable.
Figure 3Proposed submission of whole phage based products under an adaptive licensing framework. aCharacterization to be based on genotypic analysis and lytic activity. bImprovement to be characterized on the basis of classical and surrogate endpoints.
The implementation of adaptive licensing pathways for single phage and pre-made or custom phage cocktails.
| Phage selection | • One phage with high efficacy against a typed bacterial strain. | • Multiple phages targeting an untyped infection. | • Multiple phages, compromising between efficacy and host range. | • Multiple phages targeting a single typed bacterial strain. | • Multiple phages targeting multiple typed bacterial strains. | • Multiple phages targeting multiple typed bacterial species. |
| Aim | • Treat MDR/XDR strains only. | • Treat bacterial infections based on symptoms. | • Treat infections caused by multiple strains of the same species. | • Treat patient specific infections caused by a single typed species. | • Treat multiple strains of the same species in a single patient. | • Treat typed polymicrobial infections in a single patient. |
| Advantages | • Easy to change phages. | • Easy recruitment to trials. | • Easy recruitment to trials. | • Predicted high efficacy. | • Wide application. | • Wide application. |
| Disadvantages | • New phages require additional trials. | • Poor patient recovery rate. | • Cocktail obsolescence. | • Unique cocktails increase recruitment difficulty to trials. | • Every cocktail unique, more difficult to recruit trial participants. | • Every cocktail unique, more difficult to recruit trial participants. |
| Iteration | • Phage is discarded or formulation changed as new data emerges. | • Non-effective or hazardous phages are removed as data emerges. | • Non-effective or hazardous phages are removed as data emerges. | • Cocktail composition altered as data on phages emerge. | • Cocktail composition altered as data on phages emerge. | • Cocktail composition altered as data on phages emerge. |
| Design | Single site long term or multi-site short term | Single site long term or multi-site short term | Single site long term or multi-site short term | Multi-site long term | Multi-site long term | Multi-site long term |
| Implementation time | + | + | + | ++ or +++ | ++ or +++ | +++ |
| Cost | $ | $$ | $$ | $$$ | $$$ | $$$ |
Time to implementation would be affected by the form of treatment chosen. Pre-approved libraries could be implemented faster should suitable criteria be developed.
Summary of current and possible alternative pathways as applied to whole phage and phage derived therapeutics.
| Advantages | • “Gold” Standard | • Limited population approvals | • Immediate clinical usage |
| Disadvantages | • Recruitment for trials | • Varying degrees of complexity | • Limited to a single patient basis |
| Other considerations | • Likely that only highly defined products would be able to succeed, limiting success | • Approval of predefined libraries would require wholly new approvals process | • Lack of public awareness of phages |
| Time to implement | ++ | ++ or +++ | + |
| Cost to implement | $$$ | $$ or $$$ | $ |
Assumption has been made that “Classical” licensing is a baseline.
Both cost and time to implementation would be affected by the form of treatment chosen. Pre-approved libraries taking longer and costing more to achieve.