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Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh

BACKGROUND: Antibiotic resistance is rising in important bacterial pathogens. Phage therapy (PT), the use of bacterial viruses infecting the pathogen in a species-specific way, is a potential alternative. METHOD: T4-like coliphages or a commercial Russian coliphage product or placebo was orally give...

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Autores principales: Sarker, Shafiqul Alam, Sultana, Shamima, Reuteler, Gloria, Moine, Deborah, Descombes, Patrick, Charton, Florence, Bourdin, Gilles, McCallin, Shawna, Ngom-Bru, Catherine, Neville, Tara, Akter, Mahmuda, Huq, Sayeeda, Qadri, Firdausi, Talukdar, Kaisar, Kassam, Mohamed, Delley, Michèle, Loiseau, Chloe, Deng, Ying, El Aidy, Sahar, Berger, Bernard, Brüssow, Harald
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4776075/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26981577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2015.12.023
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author Sarker, Shafiqul Alam
Sultana, Shamima
Reuteler, Gloria
Moine, Deborah
Descombes, Patrick
Charton, Florence
Bourdin, Gilles
McCallin, Shawna
Ngom-Bru, Catherine
Neville, Tara
Akter, Mahmuda
Huq, Sayeeda
Qadri, Firdausi
Talukdar, Kaisar
Kassam, Mohamed
Delley, Michèle
Loiseau, Chloe
Deng, Ying
El Aidy, Sahar
Berger, Bernard
Brüssow, Harald
author_facet Sarker, Shafiqul Alam
Sultana, Shamima
Reuteler, Gloria
Moine, Deborah
Descombes, Patrick
Charton, Florence
Bourdin, Gilles
McCallin, Shawna
Ngom-Bru, Catherine
Neville, Tara
Akter, Mahmuda
Huq, Sayeeda
Qadri, Firdausi
Talukdar, Kaisar
Kassam, Mohamed
Delley, Michèle
Loiseau, Chloe
Deng, Ying
El Aidy, Sahar
Berger, Bernard
Brüssow, Harald
author_sort Sarker, Shafiqul Alam
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Antibiotic resistance is rising in important bacterial pathogens. Phage therapy (PT), the use of bacterial viruses infecting the pathogen in a species-specific way, is a potential alternative. METHOD: T4-like coliphages or a commercial Russian coliphage product or placebo was orally given over 4 days to Bangladeshi children hospitalized with acute bacterial diarrhea. Safety of oral phage was assessed clinically and by functional tests; coliphage and Escherichia coli titers and enteropathogens were determined in stool and quantitative diarrhea parameters (stool output, stool frequency) were measured. Stool microbiota was studied by 16S rRNA gene sequencing; the genomes of four fecal Streptococcus isolates were sequenced. FINDINGS: No adverse events attributable to oral phage application were observed (primary safety outcome). Fecal coliphage was increased in treated over control children, but the titers did not show substantial intestinal phage replication (secondary microbiology outcome). 60% of the children suffered from a microbiologically proven E. coli diarrhea; the most frequent diagnosis was ETEC infections. Bacterial co-pathogens were also detected. Half of the patients contained phage-susceptible E. coli colonies in the stool. E. coli represented less than 5% of fecal bacteria. Stool ETEC titers showed only a short-lived peak and were otherwise close to the replication threshold determined for T4 phage in vitro. An interim analysis after the enrollment of 120 patients showed no amelioration in quantitative diarrhea parameter by PT over standard care (tertiary clinical outcome). Stool microbiota was characterized by an overgrowth with Streptococcus belonging to the Streptococcus gallolyticus and Streptococcus salivarius species groups, their abundance correlated with quantitative diarrhea outcome, but genome sequencing did not identify virulence genes. INTERPRETATION: Oral coliphages showed a safe gut transit in children, but failed to achieve intestinal amplification and to improve diarrhea outcome, possibly due to insufficient phage coverage and too low E. coli pathogen titers requiring higher oral phage doses. More knowledge is needed on in vivo phage–bacterium interaction and the role of E. coli in childhood diarrhea for successful PT. FUNDING: The study was supported by a grant from Nestlé Nutrition and Nestlé Health Science. The trial was registered with Identifier NCT00937274 at ClinicalTrials.gov.
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spelling pubmed-47760752016-03-15 Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh Sarker, Shafiqul Alam Sultana, Shamima Reuteler, Gloria Moine, Deborah Descombes, Patrick Charton, Florence Bourdin, Gilles McCallin, Shawna Ngom-Bru, Catherine Neville, Tara Akter, Mahmuda Huq, Sayeeda Qadri, Firdausi Talukdar, Kaisar Kassam, Mohamed Delley, Michèle Loiseau, Chloe Deng, Ying El Aidy, Sahar Berger, Bernard Brüssow, Harald EBioMedicine Research Paper BACKGROUND: Antibiotic resistance is rising in important bacterial pathogens. Phage therapy (PT), the use of bacterial viruses infecting the pathogen in a species-specific way, is a potential alternative. METHOD: T4-like coliphages or a commercial Russian coliphage product or placebo was orally given over 4 days to Bangladeshi children hospitalized with acute bacterial diarrhea. Safety of oral phage was assessed clinically and by functional tests; coliphage and Escherichia coli titers and enteropathogens were determined in stool and quantitative diarrhea parameters (stool output, stool frequency) were measured. Stool microbiota was studied by 16S rRNA gene sequencing; the genomes of four fecal Streptococcus isolates were sequenced. FINDINGS: No adverse events attributable to oral phage application were observed (primary safety outcome). Fecal coliphage was increased in treated over control children, but the titers did not show substantial intestinal phage replication (secondary microbiology outcome). 60% of the children suffered from a microbiologically proven E. coli diarrhea; the most frequent diagnosis was ETEC infections. Bacterial co-pathogens were also detected. Half of the patients contained phage-susceptible E. coli colonies in the stool. E. coli represented less than 5% of fecal bacteria. Stool ETEC titers showed only a short-lived peak and were otherwise close to the replication threshold determined for T4 phage in vitro. An interim analysis after the enrollment of 120 patients showed no amelioration in quantitative diarrhea parameter by PT over standard care (tertiary clinical outcome). Stool microbiota was characterized by an overgrowth with Streptococcus belonging to the Streptococcus gallolyticus and Streptococcus salivarius species groups, their abundance correlated with quantitative diarrhea outcome, but genome sequencing did not identify virulence genes. INTERPRETATION: Oral coliphages showed a safe gut transit in children, but failed to achieve intestinal amplification and to improve diarrhea outcome, possibly due to insufficient phage coverage and too low E. coli pathogen titers requiring higher oral phage doses. More knowledge is needed on in vivo phage–bacterium interaction and the role of E. coli in childhood diarrhea for successful PT. FUNDING: The study was supported by a grant from Nestlé Nutrition and Nestlé Health Science. The trial was registered with Identifier NCT00937274 at ClinicalTrials.gov. Elsevier 2016-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4776075/ /pubmed/26981577 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2015.12.023 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Sarker, Shafiqul Alam
Sultana, Shamima
Reuteler, Gloria
Moine, Deborah
Descombes, Patrick
Charton, Florence
Bourdin, Gilles
McCallin, Shawna
Ngom-Bru, Catherine
Neville, Tara
Akter, Mahmuda
Huq, Sayeeda
Qadri, Firdausi
Talukdar, Kaisar
Kassam, Mohamed
Delley, Michèle
Loiseau, Chloe
Deng, Ying
El Aidy, Sahar
Berger, Bernard
Brüssow, Harald
Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh
title Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh
title_full Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh
title_fullStr Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh
title_short Oral Phage Therapy of Acute Bacterial Diarrhea With Two Coliphage Preparations: A Randomized Trial in Children From Bangladesh
title_sort oral phage therapy of acute bacterial diarrhea with two coliphage preparations: a randomized trial in children from bangladesh
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4776075/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26981577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2015.12.023
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