such infections are rare, but difficult to treat. treatment can involve cutting out the infected areas, removing the implants and treating with antibiotics, but often biofilms cover the artificial joints and surrounding tissue, which make treatment more difficult, said azad. those treatments had not stopped turcotte’s infection. to complicate matters, turcotte was severely allergic to several major classes of antibiotics, which limited options further and she could not withstand any more surgery, said azad.
“she would not survive. there were no good surgical options and no good antibiotic options,” said azad.
“that is when i thought about phage therapy.”
azad says she had long been interested in phage therapy. she had read about its history and learned about its growing use in some parts of the world.
azad got in touch with the winnipeg-based company cytophage technologies inc. they collaborated with her on treatment for the patient. health canada approved its one-time use after azad warned the patient would likely die without the experimental treatment. it worked.
now, six months later, turcotte’s wound has healed and her mobility is improving.
“this marks a momentous time point given that we have now met the definition of clinical ‘cure’ or control of infection,” said azad.