| Literature DB >> 35154059 |
Mark B Carascal1,2, Donna May Dela Cruz-Papa1,3,4, Roland Remenyi1, Mely Cherrylynne B Cruz1,5, Raul V Destura1,6.
Abstract
Southeast Asia (SEA) can be considered a hotspot of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) worldwide. As recent surveillance efforts in the region reported the emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens, the pursuit of therapeutic alternatives against AMR becomes a matter of utmost importance. Phage therapy, or the use of bacterial viruses called bacteriophages to kill bacterial pathogens, is among the standout therapeutic prospects. This narrative review highlights the current understanding of phages and strategies for a phage revolution in SEA. We define phage revolution as the radical use of phage therapy in infectious disease treatment against MDR infections, considering the scientific and regulatory standpoints of the region. We present a three-phase strategy to encourage a phage revolution in the SEA clinical setting, which involves: (1) enhancing phage discovery and characterization efforts, (2) creating and implementing laboratory protocols and clinical guidelines for the evaluation of phage activity, and (3) adapting regulatory standards for therapeutic phage formulations. We hope that this review will open avenues for scientific and policy-based discussions on phage therapy in SEA and eventually lead the way to its fullest potential in countering the threat of MDR pathogens in the region and worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: Southeast Asia; bacteriophage; multidrug resistance; phage revolution; phage therapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35154059 PMCID: PMC8830912 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.820572
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Reports of critical multidrug-resistant (MDR) organisms from clinical isolates in Southeast Asia (SEA) from 2011 to 2021.
| Critical MDR organisms | Reporting SEA country | References |
|---|---|---|
| Carbapenem-resistant | Cambodia |
|
| Indonesia | ||
| Malaysia | ||
| Philippines |
| |
| Singapore | ||
| Thailand |
| |
| Vietnam |
| |
| Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing, carbapenem-resistant | Indonesia |
|
| Malaysia |
| |
| Philippines | ||
| Singapore | ||
| Thailand | ||
| Vietnam | ||
| Carbapenem-resistant | Malaysia |
|
| Singapore |
| |
| Thailand | ||
| Colistin-resistant Gram-negative pathogens | Cambodia |
|
| Indonesia |
| |
| Laos |
| |
| Malaysia | ||
| Myanmar |
| |
| Philippines |
| |
| Singapore | ||
| Thailand |
| |
| Vietnam |
Critical MDR organisms based on the World Health Organization (2017), except for colistin-resistant Gram-negative pathogens.
Phages with potential biomedical applications reported in SEA from 2011 to 2021.
| Phage/Phage name | Host | Source | Reporting SEA country | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Hospital wastewater | Thailand | ||
| Sewage, freshwater | Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam | |||
|
| Seawater, soil | Malaysia, Thailand | ||
| Clinical isolates (induced) | Thailand |
| ||
| Coliphages (ØEC1, EC1-UPM, ΦKAZ14, YD-2008, CS EPEC, BL EHEC, BI-EHEC) | Coliforms (i.e., enteropathogenic/Enterohemorrhagic | Poultry and farm feces, urban catchment, tissue samples | Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore | |
|
| Tissue samples | Vietnam |
| |
| Sewage, freshwater, soil | Thailand, Vietnam | |||
|
| Watershed | Thailand |
| |
|
| Sewage, Hospital waste, freshwater | Malaysia, Thailand | ||
|
| Tissue isolates (induced) | Vietnam | ||
|
| Seafood processing environment | Thailand | ||
|
| Sewage | Malaysia |
| |
|
| Dairy farm, poultry, clinical samples | Malaysia, Thailand | ||
|
| ||||
|
| Sewage, seawater, meats | Malaysia | ||
| Freshwater, sewage, shellfish, marine sediment | Malaysia | |||
| Fermented meat, tissue samples | Thailand, Vietnam | |||
Temperate phage induced via mitomycin C.
Figure 1Number and types of original research articles on phages published in SEA and indexed in PubMed from 2011 to 2021.
Figure 2A three-phase strategy for implementing a phage revolution, with perspectives for SEA.
Phage therapy products and its applicability in SEA.
| Phage therapy products | Characteristics | Limitations | Applicability in SEA |
|---|---|---|---|
| First generation | Phages isolated from environmental enrichment | In-depth characterization of phages before using in actual therapies | Most applicable in SEA and other regions initially starting to utilize phage therapy |
| Second generation | Phage products (i.e., enzymes) with potential antibiotic properties OR combination of first-generation phages with other antimicrobials | Purification of phage proteins and additional testing requirements | Applicable to SEA once advanced manufacturing and quality testing has been established |
| Third generation | Bioengineered phages (partially or entirely) | Requirement for genomic characterization of the phages and identification of genes that may affect antimicrobial activity | Applicable in SEA once advanced knowledge and expertise on phage genetics and recombineering has been established |
The original paper of Krylov et al. (2015) described second-generation phage therapy products as mixtures of previously characterized lytic phages or combination of lytic and pseudo-temperate phages. As it may have no clear distinction with the first generation in terms of the actual product to be used in therapies, we proposed a new definition for this generation to refer to the current characteristics described in the table.
Existing regulatory standards with potential implications in phage therapy implementation in SEA.
| ASEAN regulatory standard | Gaps in implementation | Implications in phage therapy regulation |
|---|---|---|
| Medicines registration is required to obtain pharmaceutical product marketing license | Lack of technical expertise, institutional capacities, and long timelines for approval | Non-consensus on the definition of phages either as industrially manufactured medicine or as an active product ingredient makes the current regulatory guidelines non-applicable or not very clear when applied to phage therapy |
| Regional or local registration is required for innovative medicines newly introduced to the global community | Drug lag of more than 3 years due to additional regulatory burden to manufacturers and lack of technical expertise in the ASEAN for innovative medicines | Lack of technical expertise in phage therapy as an innovative medicine potentially resulting in longer lag in regulatory approval |
| Expanded access or compassionate use cases allowing the administration of unregistered products to select and special patients with no other treatment option or ineligible to clinical trials | Expanded access or compassionate use of drugs as a circumventing mechanism to the regular medicine registration pathway | Non-sustainable option for using phage therapy potentially delaying the appreciation of the public to the therapy. Decrease interest of industries in high-throughput manufacturing and production of phage formulations |
| Product development needs to follow harmonized and streamlined standards and guidelines (i.e., process validation, stability testing, and bioavailability/bioequivalence) | Shortage in resources and expertise for implementation, and differences in existing local pharmaceutical laws and regulations | Lack of technical expertise and resources in phage therapy potentially hindering early efforts in streamlining of standards and guidelines for phage formulation development |
| Establish medicines regulatory harmonization agenda | Fragmented approach in implementation of the harmonization initiatives and lack of political engagement hindering the progress of the agenda | Lack of standardized basic definitions and protocols for phage therapy hindering the establishment of a regulatory agenda for phage therapy |
Based on the report of Teo et al. (2016) on medicines regulatory systems and scope for regulatory harmonization in Southeast Asia.