In retrospect: A century of phage lessons
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Read MoreMicrobial Ninjas: Bacteriophages take on antibiotic resistant superbugs (9:15)
One of the key science questions of our time is how to beat bacteria in an age where antibiotics are no longer effective. Much like the "peak oil" crisis, the "peak antibiotic" point has likely transpired. As a society, we are now faced with a future where we need to reconsider they ways in which we are using antibiotics and invest in alternatives to this precious and dwindling resource.
The outlook is both good and bad. The bad news is we can't beat them. Bacteria have evolutionary mechanisms that far outstrip our ability to pace them and they are incredibly numerous. The good news is that beating bacteria is not our only option. Bacteriophages are the most numerous entities on the planet and they are the natural parasites of bacteria. I work with graduate and undergraduate students to discover novel bacteriophages that have the potential to kill bacterial pathogens that have become resistant to antibiotics. In the future these tiny entities might be added to western medicine’s arsenal in the fight against antibiotic resistant super bugs.
PHAGOBURN is the project name of the first European clinical study on phage therapy to treat Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa skin infections in burn patients.
The project is funded by the 7th Framework Programme for Research and Development (Health Programme). It has been launched on June 1st, 2013 and will last 27 months.
Under the coordination of the French Ministry of Defence (Army Health Service – Percy Military Hospital) collaborating with Pherecydes Pharma (French SME), PHAGOBURN gathers six other international burn treatment centres – including the Royal Military Academy/Queen Astrid Military Hospital (Belgium) and the Lausanne University Hospital (Switzerland) – as well as a second French SME, Clean Cells.
The PHAGOBURN study aims at evaluating phage therapy (therapeutic use of bacteriophages) to treat skin infections caused by Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria in burn patients.
More information can be found online (http://cordis.europa.eu/search/index.cfm?fuseaction=proj.document&PJ_RCN=13907101)
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Recently the Swiss TV station RTS had broadcast an interesting coverage about phages in their news: