Successful treatment of staphylococcus aureus prosthetic joint infection with bacteriophage therapy

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Abstract

Successful joint replacement is a life-enhancing procedure with significant growth in the past decade. Prosthetic joint infection occurs rarely; it is a biofilm-based infection that is poorly responsive to antibiotic alone. Recent interest in bacteriophage therapy has made it possible to treat some biofilm-based infections, as well as those caused by multidrug-resistant pathogens, successfully when conventional antibiotic therapy has failed. Here, we describe the case of a 61-year-old woman who was successfully treated after a second cycle of bacteriophage therapy administered at the time of a two-stage exchange procedure for a persistent methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) prosthetic knee-joint infection. We highlight the safety and efficacy of both intravenous and intra-articular infusions of bacteriophage therapy, a successful outcome with a single lytic phage, and the development of serum neutralization with prolonged treatment.

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Ramirez-Sanchez, C., Gonzales, F., Buckley, M., Biswas, B., Henry, M., Deschenes, M. V., … Aslam, S. (2021). Successful treatment of staphylococcus aureus prosthetic joint infection with bacteriophage therapy. Viruses, 13(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/v13061182

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