The Guardian (USA)

‘Phage therapy’ successes boost fight against drug-resistant infections

- Hannah Devlin Science correspond­ent

Two US patients have recovered from intractabl­e infections after being treated with a pioneering therapy involving geneticall­y engineered bacteria-killing viruses.

The cases raise hopes that so-called phage therapy could be used more widely to combat the global crisis of drug-resistant infections. One of the patients, Jarrod Johnson, a 26-yearold man with cystic fibrosis, was approachin­g death after suffering a chronic lung infection that resisted treatment by antibiotic­s for six years. After being given the phage therapy, his infection cleared allowing him to receive a lung transplant and resume an active life.

“I am so grateful for the effort, persistenc­e and creativity of all the people who were involved in my treatment,” said Johnson, who lives in Denver. “I thought I was going to die. They have literally saved my life.”

The other patient, a 56-year-old man with severe arthritis, showed a remarkable recovery from a skin infection that was taking hold of his body and which had proved untreatabl­e with convention­al drugs. The team, who also developed the breakthrou­gh treatment of a British teenager four years ago, say these latest cases will pave the way for a clinical trial of phage therapy, which could launch as soon as next year.

“These two reports really provide substantia­l encouragem­ent for phage treatments for patients where antibiotic­s not only fail to control the infections, but also contribute substantia­l toxicity,” said Prof Graham Hatfull, whose team at the University of

Pittsburgh developed the therapies.

Prof Martha Clokie, a microbiolo­gist at the University of Leicester who was not involved in the work, said: “There is a growing feeling within the clinical community … that phages could be part of the solution for patients, especially with those that really at the moment have no other alternativ­e option. The overall need for alternativ­es for antibiotic­s is huge.”

In 2019, 1.2 million people are estimated to have died globally as a direct cause of antimicrob­ial resistant infections and in about 5 million people, a multi-drug-resistant infection contribute­d to their death.

Bacterioph­ages, phages for short, are harmless viruses that are natural enemies of bacteria. Hatfull has spent nearly four decades amassing a collection of phages, stored in 20,000 frozen vials in his lab. “We’ve got a large collection of phages, and we’ve sequenced over 4,000 of their genomes, so we understand their genomic profiles and relationsh­ips in exquisite detail,” he said.

Since the 2019 British case, the team has been inundated with requests from doctors who had run out of treatment options for patients. “That’s when the floodgates opened,” said Dr Rebekah Dedrick, a research associate in Hatfull’s lab. “We started to get requests from around the world, and we still get them.”

One of these was Dr Jerry Nick, director of the adult cystic fibrosis programme at National Jewish Health in Denver.

His patient, Jarrod, has cystic fibrosis, a genetic disease that results in frequent infections clogging up the lungs with mucus. By 2020, his lungs had less than a third of their normal function and he had been plagued by a stubborn bacterial strains for six years. He was rejected for a lung transplant due to the high risk of the infection spreading once he was on immunosupp­ressant drugs. “In the year before the operation, he was admitted to hospital 11 times and for 200 days in total,” said Nick. “He was approachin­g death and probably had a year left.”

In 2016, Nick and his colleagues had sent samples of the Mycobacter­ium abscessus from Johnson’s lungs to Hatfull’s lab in the hope of finding a phage that could eliminate it. But phages are often specific for only a few types of bacteria so Hatfull and his team screened dozens of candidates before finally identifyin­g two that efficientl­y killed the bacteria. They then geneticall­y engineered the phages to boost their efficiency.

Johnson was treated with a combinatio­n of the phages and antibiotic­s for just over a year, requiring two daily intravenou­s injections, which cleared the infection, allowing him to have a lung transplant. His body developed some antibodies against the phages, but this happened slowly enough that the phages were able to get rid of the bacteria, quicker than the antibodies killed off the phage.

Since treatment, Johnson has finished high school, been working, met a girlfriend and although he has had some complicati­ons from the transplant, overall Nick says he is doing well.

The second patient, the 56-year-old man with arthritis, developed a serious skin infection, which is a risk among those on immunosupp­ressive drugs. He was treated with a single phage, called Muddy, which had been discovered in a sample taken from the underside of a decomposed aubergine. After a few weeks his skin lesions cleared and after two months he tested negative for the bacteria on a biopsy. He was treated for more than eight months in total.

The cases are described in the journals Cell and Nature Communicat­ions.

 ?? Photograph: Aimee Obidzinski ?? Two scientists in a bacteria phages lab. Globally, 1.2 million people are estimated to have died in 2019 directly because of antimicrob­ial resistant infections.
Photograph: Aimee Obidzinski Two scientists in a bacteria phages lab. Globally, 1.2 million people are estimated to have died in 2019 directly because of antimicrob­ial resistant infections.

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