The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Drug that could end misery of UTIs… for good

- By Ethan Ennals

SCIENTISTS have begun using revolution­ary gene-editing drugs to treat agonising and recurring urinary tract infections (UTIs).

The medication is put directly into the bladder via a catheter, where it attacks the DNA inside the bacteria that cause the problems, ultimately destroying them.

Experts believe this method could be superior to antibiotic­s, which bacteria can quickly become resistant to.

The drug is based on Nobel Prize-winning genetic-engineerin­g technology known as CRISPR, which allows sections of faulty DNA inside cells to be manipulate­d.

UTIs are among the most common infections in the UK, affecting more than a million people every year.

Symptoms include burning pain when passing urine and feeling the urge to use the toilet when the bladder is empty.

For most, a short course of antibiotic­s clears up the infection within days, but as many as 1.6million people suffer from chronic UTIs – classed as three or more infections a year.

Experts believe this occurs when

‘It can leave patients on antibiotic­s at all times’

the bacteria stops responding to antibiotic­s. This means that, though the infection’s severity will be temporaril­y reduced, the bacteria is not destroyed.

Scientists at US developer

Locus Bioscience­s, who produce CRISPR-based medicines, believe the problem can be fixed with the experiment­al new drug.

Previously, similar treatments have involved replacing faulty sections of DNA with healthy ones in the hope of triggering health benefits. For UTIs, scientists use a different method where the drug is delivered directly to the site of the bacterial infection via injection. Here, it can break down the bacteria’s DNA and destroy it.

The protein is carried inside a virus – called a bacterioph­age – which seeks out bacteria. Patients are also given the drug through an intravenou­s injection, designed to find and kill any remnants of the bacteria which may be hiding in the patient’s blood.

In September, the first patient in the US received the drug. Eight more have now undergone the procedure. According to Paul Garofolo, chief executive of Locus Bioscience­s, the first results of the trial will be published next year.

Mr Garofolo added: ‘Recurrent UTIs are horrible. We hope our treatment can clear out the infection once and for all.’

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