| Literature DB >> 32380707 |
Evgenii Rubalskii1,2, Stefan Ruemke1,2, Christina Salmoukas1,2, Erin C Boyle1, Gregor Warnecke1, Igor Tudorache1, Malakh Shrestha1, Jan D Schmitto1, Andreas Martens1, Sebastian V Rojas1, Stefan Ziesing3, Svetlana Bochkareva4, Christian Kuehn1,2,5,6, Axel Haverich1,2,5,6.
Abstract
(1) Objective: Bacterial resistance to conventional antibiotic therapy is an increasingly significant worldwide challenge to human health. The objective is to evaluate whether bacteriophage therapy could complement or be a viable alternative to conventional antibiotic therapy in critical cases of bacterial infection related to cardiothoracic surgery. (2)Entities:
Keywords: bacterial infection; cardiothoracic surgery; implant-associated infection; phage therapy; surgical site infection; transplant-associated infection
Year: 2020 PMID: 32380707 PMCID: PMC7277081 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics9050232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Summary of phage therapy application and outcomes.
| Patient Data, Infection Site, and Date of Surgery 1 | Source and Date of Isolated Bacteria | Basis for Phage Therapy | Titer and Bacteriophage(s) | Date, Dosage, and Route of Phage Administration | Antibiotic Therapy Before & During Phage Application | Microbiological Control After Phage Therapy | Survival After Phage Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1, | Implant drainage | Continuous isolation of | 1 × 108 pfu/mL | 10.09.2015: One 25 mL local application with 6 mL gentamicin (240 mg) and 20 mL daptomycin (350 mg) via drainage One 50 mL per os 12.09.2015: 25 mL locally, intraoperatively | 2000 mg cefepime, | Died 2 months after phage therapy due to a new bacterial infection caused by | |
| Patient 2, | Bronchial lavage | Infection with the pan-resistant bacteria | 1 × 108 pfu/mL | 29.08.2016–30.08.2016: 2 mL inhalation once per day (mornings) 18 mL via nasogastric tube once per day (mornings) 31.08.2016–01.09.2016: 2 mL inhalation two times per day (mornings and evenings) 18 mL via nasogastric tube two times per day (mornings and evenings) | 2000 mg ceftazidime, 600 mg linezolid, 500 mg avibactam intravenously twice per day. | Until present | |
| Patient 3, | Blood culture | Continuous isolation of | 1 × 109 pfu/mL | 06.01.2017–08.01.2017: 20 mL local application via drainage every 12 hours (4 doses) | 600 mg rifampicin intravenously twice per day. | Until present | |
| Patient 4, | Wound swab | Continuous isolation of | 1 × 109 pfu/mL | 30.06.2017–06.07.2017: 20 mL local application via drainage every 12 hours (14 doses) | 500 mg daptomycin intravenously once per day. | Died 20 months after heart transplantation due transplant failure | |
| Patient 5, | Implant drainage | Continuous isolation of | 1 × 109 pfu/mL | 09.08.2017–17.08.2017: 10 mL local application via drainage once per day after flushing with antiseptics and antibiotics 2 mL intranasal once per day and 10–20 mL per os once per day 18.08.2017–23.08.2017: 10 mL local application via drainage every 12 hours after flushing with antiseptics and antibiotics 10–20 mL per os once per day | 500 mg daptomycin intravenously once per day. | 100× reduction of | Died 1.5 months after beginning phage therapy due to |
| Patient 6, | Catheter | Continuous isolation of | 4 × 1010 pfu/mL | 29.11.2017: 4 mL locally, intraoperatively mixed with fibrin glue (Tisseel, Baxter, USA) | 375 mg sultamicillin two times per day per os. | Not tested | Until present |
| Patient 7, | Wound swab | Continuous isolation of | 4 × 1010 pfu/mL | 09.05.2018: 4 mL locally, intraoperatively mixed with fibrin glue (Tisseel, Baxter, USA) | 600 mg clindamycin three times per day per os. | Until present | |
| Patient 8, | Wound swab | Continuous isolation of | 4 × 1010 pfu/mL | 13.06.2018: 4 mL locally, intraoperatively mixed with fibrin glue (Tisseel, Baxter, USA) | 2 MIU colistin intravenously twice per day. | Until present |
1 f., female; m., male; and y.o., years old
Figure 1PET-CT scans of Patient 3 before (A) and seven months after (B) phage therapy in the area of the aortic graft and of Patient 4 before (C) and two months after (D) phage therapy in the area of the left ventricular assist device (LVAD) and pleural cavity empyema. Yellow emission shows level of accumulation of the tracer substance (2-[18F]fluoro-2-desoxy-D-glucose), which corresponds to inflammation.
List of bacteriophage strains.
| Bacteriophage Name | Taxonomy | GenBank Accession Number | Isolation Source | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Order | MK800154.1 | Wastewater, Moscow, Russia | This study | |
| Order | KY683735.1 | Chicken feces, Moscow Region, Russia | [ | |
| Order | KY683736.1 | Cowshed sewage, Moscow Region, Russia | [ | |
| Order | KY000082.1 | Wastewater, Moscow region, Russia | [ | |
| Order Caudovirales; | KY000083.1 | Wastewater, Moscow region, Russia | [ | |
| Order | MK331931.1 | Clinical material, Astrakhan, Russia | This study | |
| Order | MK331930.1 | Patient’s wound, Chelyabinsk, Russia | [ | |
| Order | KY000084.1 | Clinical material, Chelyabinsk, Russia | [ | |
| Order | KY000085.1 | Clinical material, Moscow, Russia | [ | |
| Order | KY000081.1 | Wastewater, Moscow region, Russia | [ | |
| Order | KY000080.1 | Wastewater, Moscow region, Russia | [ |