| Literature DB >> 28828194 |
Derek M Lin1, Britt Koskella1, Henry C Lin1.
Abstract
The practice of phage therapy, which uses bacterial viruses (phages) to treat bacterial infections, has been around for almost a century. The universal decline in the effectiveness of antibiotics has generated renewed interest in revisiting this practice. Conventionally, phage therapy relies on the use of naturally-occurring phages to infect and lyse bacteria at the site of infection. Biotechnological advances have further expanded the repertoire of potential phage therapeutics to include novel strategies using bioengineered phages and purified phage lytic proteins. Current research on the use of phages and their lytic proteins, specifically against multidrug-resistant bacterial infections, suggests phage therapy has the potential to be used as either an alternative or a supplement to antibiotic treatments. Antibacterial therapies, whether phage- or antibiotic-based, each have relative advantages and disadvantages; accordingly, many considerations must be taken into account when designing novel therapeutic approaches for preventing and treating bacterial infections. Although much is still unknown about the interactions between phage, bacteria, and human host, the time to take phage therapy seriously seems to be rapidly approaching.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic resistance; Bacteriophage; Bacteriophage therapy; Endolysin; Lysin; Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; Multidrug resistance; Phage; Phage safety; Phage therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28828194 PMCID: PMC5547374 DOI: 10.4292/wjgpt.v8.i3.162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastrointest Pharmacol Ther ISSN: 2150-5349
Published findings on phage therapy in humans and in animal models
| Human | Dysentery | Oral | All four treated individuals recovered after 24 h | [1] | |
| Human | Cholera | Oral | 68 of 73 survived in treatment group and only 44 of 118 in control group | [1] | |
| Murine | Sepsis | Oral | 66.7% reduced mortality | [38] | |
| Hamster | Ileocecitis | Oral | Co-administration with | [39] | |
| Hamster | Ileocecitis | Oral dose every 8 h for 72 h | 92% reduced mortality | [39] | |
| Murine | Bacteremia | i.p. | 100% reduced mortality | [41] | |
| β | Murine | Bacteremia | i.p. | 100% reduced mortality | [42] |
| Murine | Bacteremia | i.p. | 100% reduced mortality | [43] | |
| Murine | Sepsis | i.p. | Animals protected against fatal dose of | [44] | |
| Murine | Meningitis and Sepsis | i.p. or s.c. | 100% and 50% reduced mortality for meningitis and sepsis, respectively | [45] | |
| Murine | Sepsis | i.p. and oral | 92% and 84% reduced mortality for | [46] | |
| Rabbit | Wound infection | s.c. | Co-administration with | [47] | |
| Human | Diabetic foot ulcer | Topical | All 6 treated patients recovered | [50] | |
| Unclassified bacterial dysentery | Human | Dysentery | Oral | Phage cocktail improved symptoms of 74% of 219 patients | [51] |
| Human | Typhoid | Oral | In cohort of 18577 children, phage treatment associated with 5-fold decrease in typhoid incidence compared to placebo | [49] | |
| Antibiotic-resistant | Human | Chronic Otitis | Oral | Phage treatment safe and symptoms improved in double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase I/II trial | [61] |
Reduced mortality is for phage-treated groups and are relative to 100% mortality in control animals, unless otherwise specified. MDR: Multi-drug-resistant; i.p.: Intraperitoneal injection; s.c.: Subcutaneous injection.
Recently published findings on phage lytic enzymes
| Phage-derived lysins | ABgp46 | MDR | Cross-inoculation significantly reduced bacterial density | [64] | |
| PlyF307 | Murine | MDR | [65] | ||
| Cpl-1 | Murine | [66] | |||
| Cocktail of 6 distinct lysins | MRSA | Effective against biofilms | [67] | ||
| PlyCD | Reduced | [68] | |||
| PlySs2 | Murine | i.p. treatment reduced mortality from lethal bacteremia | [69] | ||
| PlyG | Eliminated | [71] | |||
| Bioengineered chimeric lysins | CHAPK | MRSA | Eliminated MRSA and dispersed biofilms | [72] | |
| ClyH | Murine | MRSA | Treatment rescued mice from bacteremia | [73] | |
| Cpl-711 | Murine | Treatment rescued mice from bacteremia | [74] | ||
| Ply187 | Murine | Prevented bacterial endophthalmitis | [75] | ||
| Artilysins | Nematode gut | Decolonized | [76] | ||
| Human keratinocytes | Protected cells from bacterial challenge | [76] | |||
| Lysin and antibiotic combination therapy | CF-301 | Murine | MRSA | Lysin treatment was most effective when combined with vancomycin or daptomycin | [77] |
| MR-10 | Murine | Burn wound infection | Lysin treatment was most effective when combined with minocycline | [78] |
MDR: Multi-drug-resistant; i.p.: Intraperitoneal injection; MRSA: Methicillin-resistant S. aureus.