Antibiotics (Sep 2024)

Phage–Antibiotic Combination Therapy against Recurrent <i>Pseudomonas</i> Septicaemia in a Patient with an Arterial Stent

  • Ulla Elina Otava,
  • Laura Tervo,
  • Riikka Havela,
  • Liisa Vuotari,
  • Matti Ylänne,
  • Annette Asplund,
  • Sheetal Patpatia,
  • Saija Kiljunen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics13100916
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 916

Abstract

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Background: Intravascular stent infections are often associated with high risks of morbidity and mortality. We report here a case of a patient with an arterial stent and recurrent Pseudomonas septicaemias successfully treated with phage–meropenem combination therapy. Methods: A 75-year-old female with arteriosclerosis and comorbidities went through a femoropopliteal bypass with prosthesis in the right inguinal area. After the bypass, she developed a recurring Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection and also neutropenia during different antibiotics. A rapidly growing pseudoaneurysm in the right inguinal area led to an emergency intra-arterial stent placement during blood stream infection, later suspected to host a P. aeruginosa biofilm. Removing the stent was deemed precarious, and phage therapy was considered as a compassionate treatment option. A three-phage cocktail infecting the P. aeruginosa strain was prepared and administered intravenously together with meropenem for two weeks, after which, a ten-month follow-up was carried out. Results: No adverse reactions occurred during the phage therapy treatment, while infection markers were normalized. In addition, recovery was seen in a PET-CT scan. During the 10-month follow-up, no further P. aeruginosa septicaemias occurred. Conclusions: Phage–meropenem combination therapy was thus found safe and effective in the treatment of recurrent Pseudomonas septicaemia in a patient with an arterial stent.

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