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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 86 - 86
1 Dec 2021
Kolenda C Medina M Legendre T Blazere L Bergot M Arnaud V Souche A Roussel-Gaillard T Martins-Simoes P Tristan A Ferry T Laurent F
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Aim

Bacteriophages, viruses specific of bacteria, are receiving substantial attention as alternative antibacterial agents to treat bacteria frequently multi-resistant to antibiotics and/or able to form biofilms, such as staphylococci. The latter are responsible for very difficult to treat bone and joint infections (BJIs). In this context, our consortium aims to develop a production of therapeutic phages in accordance with the will of ANSM (French National Agency for the Safety of Medicines and Health Products) to encourage the development of a national academic platform for phage therapy. We report the isolation and characterization of new anti-Staphylococcus phages as well as the evaluation of their activity on a collection of clinical strains of S. aureus (SA) and coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) in order to assess their therapeutic potential.

Method

Seventeen phages were isolated from wastewater samples. Their identification was obtained by Illumina whole genome sequencing. To evaluate their spectrum of activity, 30 genetically characterized SA strains representative of the main genetic backgrounds as well as 32 strains belonging to 7 CNS species responsible for BJIs were included. The spot test technique, based on the determination of the Efficiency Of Plating ratio, was used (EOP, ratio between the phage titer obtained on a tested strain/titer on a reference strain, close to 1 if high sensitivity to the phage).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 26 - 26
1 Dec 2019
Kolenda C Josse J Medina M Fevre C Lustig S Ferry T Laurent F
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Aim

Staphylococcus aureus is the first causative agent of bone and joints infections (BJI). It causes difficult-to-treat infections because of its ability to form biofilms, and to be internalized and persist inside osteoblastic cells. Recently, phage therapy has emerged as a promising therapy to improve the management of chronic BJI. In the present study, we evaluated the efficacy of an assembly of three bacteriophages previously used in a clinical case report (Ferry, 2018) against S. aureus in in vitro models of biofilm and intracellular osteoblast infection.

Methods

Using HG001 S. aureus, the bactericidal activities of the assembly of the three bacteriophages (Pherecydes Pharma) used alone or in association with vancomycin or rifampicin were compared by quantifying the number of viable bacteria in mature biofilms and infected osteoblasts after 24h of exposure.