| Literature DB >> 27978847 |
Steven M Opal1,2.
Abstract
The emergence of multi-drug resistant (MDR) microbial pathogens threatens the very foundation upon which standard antibacterial chemotherapy is based. We must consider non-antibiotic solutions to manage invasive bacterial infections. Transition from antibiotics to non-traditional treatments poses real clinical challenges that will not be easy to solve. Antibiotics will continue to reliably treat some infections (e.g., group A streptococci and Treponema pallidum) but will likely need adjuvant therapies or will need to be replaced for many bacterial infections in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic resistance; Monoclonal antibodies to treat bacterial infections; Novel therapies for bacterial infections; Phage therapy; Quorum-sensing inhibitors
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27978847 PMCID: PMC5159963 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1549-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Summary of some non-antibiotic inhibitors of bacterial growth and/or pathogenesis
| Treatment strategy | Mechanism of action | Possible benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Hemoperfusion devices [ | Extracorporeal filters that clear blood pathogens by their physiochemical properties | Quickly reduce blood concentrations of selected bacteria by orders of magnitude |
| Quorum sensing inhibitors [ | Disrupt intercellular signaling between bacteria to block coordinated tissue invasion | Blocks sensing of necessary concentrations of bacteria for optimal synthesis of virulence and invasion genes |
| Lytic bacteriophage [ | Bacteriolysis induced by selected lytic phage or phage cocktails | Parasitic predators of bacteria that can be used as highly specific, targeted, bactericidal agents |
| Polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies [ | Improved bacterial vaccines, transgenic cattle for polyclonal immunotherapy; designer monoclonal antibodies; immune-stimulant therapy for sepsis induced immunosuppression | Active or passive immunotherapy to opsonize bacteria or inhibit exotoxins and virulence factors; adjuvants to stimulate cellular immune function |
| Liposome-based cyto-toxin inhibitors [ | Engineered liposomes to serve as cell membrane decoys to absorb bacterial cyto-toxins | Capture pore-forming cyto-toxins and protect host cell membranes from cellular injury |
| Non-immune toleralizing approaches [ | Treatments allowing the host to survive and compensate for pathogen presence or until immune clearance removes the pathogen | Permits the host to tolerate the pathogen until cleared by immune or non-immune mechanisms (e.g., oral or intravenous fluids for cholera) |