Phage Therapy Steps Further Out of the Wings to Take On Superbugs
Phage therapy is gaining some traction as a treatment option against superbugs.
Diane Shader Smith writes in
Phage therapy isn’t new; before antibiotics came along phages were seen as a potential infection-fighting treatment. But then phage therapy fell off the radar and is still relatively unknown (a January article in
As Infection Control Today
Phage-
According to the Phage Therapy Center, a company that offers the treatment: “As bacteria evolve resistance, the relevant phages naturally evolve alongside. When super bacterium appears, the super phage already attacks it…. Phages have special advantage for localized use, because they penetrate deeper as long as the infection is present, rather than decrease rapidly in concentration below the surface like antibiotics.”
On top of cystic fibrosis, Mallory also had to deal with Burkholderia cepacian, a bacterium that had invaded her lungs. A biotech startup company, working with the US Naval Medical Research Center, treated Mallory with a bacteriophage they believed could save her.
“Mallory received the first dose of the phage cocktail ... but it was too late,” Smith writes.
It’s not too late to try to help others with phage therapy, however. She and Mallory’s father, Mark Smith, established Mallory’s Legacy Fund at the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and also raised about $100,000 to enable the
Also as a result of the Smiths getting the word out about Mallory, Australian investigators published
And also last week,
Diane Shader Smith cites CDC statistics that more than 2 million Americans are infected with antibiotic-resistant drugs and about 23,000 people die from those infections each year.
“The resurrection of phage therapy couldn’t be more timely,” Shader Smith writes. “Many strains of bacteria, fungi, and other pathogens have become resistant to the antimicrobial drugs that once made treating infections a simple and routine part of medicine.”