| Literature DB >> 32093349 |
Ana M Pinto1,2, Miguel A Cerqueira1, Manuel Bañobre-Lópes1, Lorenzo M Pastrana1, Sanna Sillankorva1.
Abstract
The treatment and management of chronic wounds presents a massive financial burden for global health care systems, with significant and disturbing consequences for the patients affected. These wounds remain challenging to treat, reduce the patients' life quality, and are responsible for a high percentage of limb amputations and many premature deaths. The presence of bacterial biofilms hampers chronic wound therapy due to the high tolerance of biofilm cells to many first- and second-line antibiotics. Due to the appearance of antibiotic-resistant and multidrug-resistant pathogens in these types of wounds, the research for alternative and complementary therapeutic approaches has increased. Bacteriophage (phage) therapy, discovered in the early 1900s, has been revived in the last few decades due to its antibacterial efficacy against antibiotic-resistant clinical isolates. Its use in the treatment of non-healing wounds has shown promising outcomes. In this review, we focus on the societal problems of chronic wounds, describe both the history and ongoing clinical trials of chronic wound-related treatments, and also outline experiments carried out for efficacy evaluation with different phage-host systems using in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo animal models. We also describe the modern and most recent delivery systems developed for the incorporation of phages for species-targeted antibacterial control while protecting them upon exposure to harsh conditions, increasing the shelf life and facilitating storage of phage-based products. In this review, we also highlight the advances in phage therapy regulation.Entities:
Keywords: bacteriophage; biofilms; chronic wound; delivery systems; phage therapy; wound healing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32093349 PMCID: PMC7077204 DOI: 10.3390/v12020235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Prevalence of wound types in the Medicare population (data from the year 2014) [25].
Figure 2Phases of wound healing [4].
Figure 3The wound infection continuum [18,30].
Figure 4Steps leading to bacterial biofilm formation Adapted from [60].
Figure 5Phage delivery systems to wounds.
Different phage therapy approaches reported using in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo animal and human models of chronic wounds.
| Authors | Year | Individual/Cocktail Phages | Phage Name | Host Organism | Study Model | Dosage | Main Conclusions | ||||||||||||
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| [ | 2013 | Cocktail of 5 species-specific phages | F44/10 | × | × | 108 to 109 PFU/mL | Decrease of the bacterial counts. Wound healing improvement. | ||||||||||||
| F125/10 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| F510/08 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| F770/05 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| F1245/05 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | 2013 | Species-specific phage | 1ND | × | × | 106 PFU/mL | The combination of phage treatment with debridement improved healing and reduced bacterial counts. | ||||||||||||
| [ | 2014 | Cocktail of 3 species-specific phages | 14/1 | × | × | 109 PFU/mL | The topical application of this cocktail did not show any adverse effects; however, its efficacy was not adequately studied. | ||||||||||||
| PNM | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| ISP | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | 2017 | Individual phage and cocktails | Sb-1 | × | × | 107 PFU/mL | No allergic reactions observed and after seven days, bacterial loads decreased and wounds improved. | ||||||||||||
| Pyophage | × | × | × | × | × | ||||||||||||||
| Fersis | × | × | |||||||||||||||||
| [ | 2018 | Cocktail of 2 species-specific phages | vB_EcoS_CEB_EC3a | × | × | × | 109 PFU/mL | Phage-honey acted synergistically and reduced CFU counts. | |||||||||||
| vB_PaeP_PAO1-D | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | 2018 | Individual phage and cocktails | DRA88 | × | × | 4 h treatment: 5 μL containing 106 PFU/mL | Reduction of viable cells and biofilm formation. | ||||||||||||
| SAB4328-A | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | 2019 | Cocktail of 3 species-specific phages | ND | × | × | × | × | 0.1 mL/cm2 and 109 PFU/mL | 3 to 5 doses of topical phage resulted in no signs of infection. | ||||||||||
| [ | 2019 | Individual phage and cocktails | EC7a | × | × | × | 100 µL of phage or phage cocktail at different multiplicities of infection (MOI) | Decrease of viable cells in biofilms formed on porcine skins for phages applied alone or in a cocktail. | |||||||||||
| EC7b | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| EC3a | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| P2 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| P1 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| AB7a | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| PA1 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| PA4 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| Pm5460 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| Pm5461 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | 2019 | Individual phage and cocktails | vB_EfaS-Zip | × | × | 108 PFU/mL | Three hours of treatment with the phage cocktail led to a 2.5 log CFU/mL reduction. | ||||||||||||
| vB_EfaP-Max | × | ||||||||||||||||||
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| [ | 2017 | Cocktail of 2 species-specific phages | BFC1 | × | × | ND | Blood cultures were negative for the presence of bacteria. However, the wounds remained colonized. The patient succumbed to blood sepsis derived from | ||||||||||||
| [ | 2018 | Species-specific phage | Sb-1 | × | × | PFU/mL not referred. Injections of 0.7 cc of phage, once a week for seven weeks (total of 4.9 cc) | Ulcer healed. Re-ossification of the distal phalanx occurred and the patient discharged after three months. | ||||||||||||
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| [ | 2017 | Cocktail | KØ1 | × | × | 108 PFU/mL | Phage cocktail entrapped within liposomes reduced more cells and led to a faster resolution of the infection. | ||||||||||||
| KØ2 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| KØ3 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| KØ4 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| KØ5 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| [ | 2018 | Cocktail | MR-5 | × | × | × | 109 PFU/50 µL | Cocktail of two phages reduced more bacteria and led to faster healings compared to individual phages. Liposomal phage cocktail entrapment persisted longer at the wound site. | |||||||||||
| MR-10 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
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| [ | 2015 | Species-specific phage | K | × | × | 109 PFU/mL | The formulation of the phage with poly(N-isopropylacrylamid) nanospheres copolymerized with allylamine, anchored onto a simulated dressing via plasma deposition, demonstrated to lyse bacterial isolates under body temperature of 37 °C. | ||||||||||||
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| [ | 2014 | Species-specific phage | K | × | × | 105 PFU/mL | Higher antibacterial activity found in phage-loaded emulsions compared to free phages. The three strains studied here were rapidly and entirely killed by nanoemulsions. | ||||||||||||
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| [ | 2019 | Species-specific phage | PA5 | × | × | 1011 PFU | Phage immobilization within fibrin glue resulted in the release of high titers of viable phages during 11 days. | ||||||||||||
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| [ | 2017 | Species-specific phage | vB_Pae_Kakheti25 | × | × | ND | The use of polycaprolactone to immobilize the phage eradicated the bacterium. | ||||||||||||
| [ | 2018 | Species-specific phage | T4 | × | × | × | 1013 PFU/mL | Polycaprolactone/collagen I B | |||||||||||
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| [ | 2014 | Species-specific phage | ΦK | × | × | 108 PFU/mL | Phage release facilitated by hyaluronidase, which degraded the hyaluronic acid methacrylate present in the upper layer of the hydrogel, promoting the subsequent killing of bacteria. | ||||||||||||
| [ | 2019 | Species-specific phage | MR10 | × | × | × | MOI 10 | PVA-Sodium alginate hydrogel-based dressings with minocycline and phages were effective against infected burn wounds, reducing bacterial colonization and inflammation significantly. | |||||||||||
| Kpn5 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
| PA5 | × | ||||||||||||||||||
1 Not defined.