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Related: About this forumGenetically Engineered (bacterial) Viruses Treat Antibiotic-Resistant Infection
Researchers said they treated a 15-year-old patients antibiotic-resistant infection with the help of genetically engineered viruses. The effort points to a potential path for countering the growing threat of bacteria resistant to antibiotics. The researchers, in the U.S. and the United Kingdom, saved the patient with the help of bacteria-destroying viruses known as bacteriophages that occur naturally and are the most populous organisms on the planet. Using genetic engineering, the researchers tweaked some of the phages to specifically fight the patients infection. The effort, published Wednesday in the journal Nature Medicine, marked the first reported use of genetically engineered phages to treat a patient, researchers said. The success suggests promise for using engineered phages more broadly against antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
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The 15-year old patient, who had cystic fibrosis, had been taking antibiotics for eight years to fight off two persistent strains of bacteria. After a lung transplant for her cystic fibrosis, however, the infection spread and stopped responding to the antibiotics. As a result, the girls liver lost function; she stopped eating and drinking and had visible lesions on her skin. Looking for new options to treat the patient, Dr. Spencer turned to phage therapy. She partnered with a team at the University of Pittsburgh that had amassed a library of over 15,000 different phages from across the world in order to find one that would attack the patients infections.
The team focused their search on 1,800 phages both that matched the type of bacteria of the patients infections and whose genetic makeup was known. They found three phagesfrom Pittsburgh, Providence, R.I., and Durban, South Africabut only one of the matching phages would actually eliminate the infection. That is because, while some phages reproduce within their bacterial hosts and then bust them open, others replicate with the bacteria without harming it, according to Robert Schooley, a professor of medicine in the division of infectious diseases at the University of California, San Diego and a senior author on the case.
he researchers used genetic engineering to remove a gene that prevents the phages from killing the bacteria, turning them into bacteria destroyers, said Graham Hatfull, a professor of biological sciences at the University of Pittsburgh and a senior author on the paper. Dr. Spencer then administered the three-phage cocktail to the patientboth intravenously and directly applied to her skinin addition to a few antibiotics. The patient healed gradually over six months. The patient is still actively receiving both antibiotic and phage treatment to stave off the infection while otherwise living a relatively normal life, according to Dr. Spencer.
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https://www.wsj.com/articles/genetically-engineered-viruses-treat-antibiotic-resistant-infection-11557334800 (paid subscription)