Microorganisms (Nov 2021)

Application of Bacteriophages for Mycobacterial Infections, from Diagnosis to Treatment

  • Christopher G. Shield,
  • Benjamin M. C. Swift,
  • Timothy D. McHugh,
  • Rebekah M. Dedrick,
  • Graham F. Hatfull,
  • Giovanni Satta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9112366
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 2366

Abstract

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis and other non-tuberculous mycobacteria are responsible for a variety of different infections affecting millions of patients worldwide. Their diagnosis is often problematic and delayed until late in the course of disease, requiring a high index of suspicion and the combined efforts of clinical and laboratory colleagues. Molecular methods, such as PCR platforms, are available, but expensive, and with limited sensitivity in the case of paucibacillary disease. Treatment of mycobacterial infections is also challenging, typically requiring months of multiple and combined antibiotics, with associated side effects and toxicities. The presence of innate and acquired drug resistance further complicates the picture, with dramatic cases without effective treatment options. Bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria) have been used for decades in Eastern Europe for the treatment of common bacterial infections, but there is limited clinical experience of their use in mycobacterial infections. More recently, bacteriophages’ clinical utility has been re-visited and their use has been successfully demonstrated both as diagnostic and treatment options. This review will focus specifically on how mycobacteriophages have been used recently in the diagnosis and treatment of different mycobacterial infections, as potential emerging technologies, and as an alternative treatment option.

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