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Bacteriophage Therapy for the Prevention and Treatment of Fracture-Related Infection Caused by Staphylococcus aureus:A Preclinical Study

Authors :
Onsea, Jolien
Post, Virginia
Buchholz, Tim
Schwegler, Hella
Zeiter, Stephan
Wagemans, Jeroen
Pirnay, Jean Paul
Merabishvili, Maya
D'Este, Matteo
Rotman, Stijn G.
Trampuz, Andrej
Verhofstad, Michael H.J.
Obremskey, William T.
Lavigne, Rob
Richards, R. Geoff
Moriarty, T. Fintan
Metsemakers, Willem Jan
Onsea, Jolien
Post, Virginia
Buchholz, Tim
Schwegler, Hella
Zeiter, Stephan
Wagemans, Jeroen
Pirnay, Jean Paul
Merabishvili, Maya
D'Este, Matteo
Rotman, Stijn G.
Trampuz, Andrej
Verhofstad, Michael H.J.
Obremskey, William T.
Lavigne, Rob
Richards, R. Geoff
Moriarty, T. Fintan
Metsemakers, Willem Jan
Source :
Onsea , J , Post , V , Buchholz , T , Schwegler , H , Zeiter , S , Wagemans , J , Pirnay , J P , Merabishvili , M , D'Este , M , Rotman , S G , Trampuz , A , Verhofstad , M H J , Obremskey , W T , Lavigne , R , Richards , R G , Moriarty , T F & Metsemakers , W J 2021 , ' Bacteriophage Therapy for the Prevention and Treatment of Fracture-Related Infection Caused by Staphylococcus aureus : A Preclinical Study ' , Microbiology spectrum , vol. 9 , no. 3 , e01736-21 .
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Although several studies have shown promising clinical outcomes of phage therapy in patients with orthopedic device-related infections, questions remain regarding the optimal application protocol, systemic effects, and the impact of the immune response. This study provides a proof-of-concept of phage therapy in a clinically relevant rabbit model of fracture-related infection (FRI) caused by Staphylococcus aureus. In a prevention setting, phage in saline (without any biomaterial-based carrier) was highly effective in the prevention of FRI, compared to systemic antibiotic prophylaxis alone. In the subsequent study involving treatment of established infection, daily administration of phage in saline through a subcutaneous access tube was compared to a single intraoperative application of a phage-loaded hydrogel and a control group receiving antibiotics only. In this setting, although a possible trend of bacterial load reduction on the implant was observed with the phage-loaded hydrogel, no superior effect of phage therapy was found compared to antibiotic treatment alone. The application of phage in saline through a subcutaneous access tube was, however, complicated by superinfection and the development of neutralizing antibodies. The latter was not found in the animals that received the phage-loaded hydrogel, which may indicate that encapsulation of phages into a carrier such as a hydrogel limits their exposure to the adaptive immune system. These studies show phage therapy can be useful in targeting orthopedic device-related infection, however, further research and improvements of these application methods are required for this complex clinical setting.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Onsea , J , Post , V , Buchholz , T , Schwegler , H , Zeiter , S , Wagemans , J , Pirnay , J P , Merabishvili , M , D'Este , M , Rotman , S G , Trampuz , A , Verhofstad , M H J , Obremskey , W T , Lavigne , R , Richards , R G , Moriarty , T F & Metsemakers , W J 2021 , ' Bacteriophage Therapy for the Prevention and Treatment of Fracture-Related Infection Caused by Staphylococcus aureus : A Preclinical Study ' , Microbiology spectrum , vol. 9 , no. 3 , e01736-21 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1313640886
Document Type :
Electronic Resource