Monday 19 May 2008: Published in Eastern Daily Press (EDP)
Letters To The Editor




Today's astounding news that drug XF37 shows promise in killing MRSA, is astounding only be the fact that bacterial killers have been around now for 80 years, though the NHS refuses to use them. It may surprise people to know that Georgian (that's south of Russia) hospitals regularly spray bacteriophages around their wards to kill off bacteria, and that recent Polish research reveals that using phages (without any side effects either) to kill MRSA is only 10% of the cost of using antibiotics.
 
So, why is a company spending millions on developing XF73? Probably nothing at all to do with the expected huge incomes from the patent. As everyone knows, despite desperate Alice in Wonderland-style attempts by chemical companies to do so, living organisms such as bacteriophages cannot be patented; anyone is free to dip a bucket into a river and select the required phages to do the job. It's really not rocket science.
 
It seems again, as usual, the general public is once again the pawn, as Big Business fights to be the first to market. If saving lives were more important than income, why did everyone jump on the antibiotics bandwagon and abandon phage research in the 1940s?  While the NHS wrings its hands and cuts services, trying to save money, it wastes billions on ineffective antibiotics, follow-up complications, and one-off ''Deep Cleans', while ignoring the real benefits available with bacteriophages. No wonder chemical companies are so eager to jump on the gravy train! 
 
 
Hungate Street
Aylsham
Norfolk

 

























Bacteriophage conference 2008 - Herts., near London UK
announcing the successful outcome of the Phase 2 clinical trial

Ref: The health value of bacteriophages
by Churchill Fellow, Grace Filby
www.amazingphage
.info

 





Phages are water-borne viruses that kill bacteria naturally. Image courtesy Bill Riedel PhD, MCIC
Bill Riedel giving a presentation on phage therapy
The Absurdity of the Superbug Crisis consists of the fact that it can be demonstrated that we had technology, namely bacteriophage therapy, which can cure many superbug infections, long before we created the antibiotic-resistance superbug crisis through massive abuse of antibiotics. In spite of a voluminous literature attesting to the scientific validity and medical effectiveness of phage therapy, there are still phage therapy deniers who would resist the careful deployment of these weapons of mass destructions for specific pathogens in the war with superbugs. Superbugs are winning most battles with an estimated 17 million human casualties due to microbial infections worldwide annually. Many of these infections are acquired by patients after entering hospitals for unrelated illnesses, making hospitals significant killing fields in the war with superbugs.

"Then went he down, and dipped himself seven times in Jordan,
according to the saying of the man of God: and his flesh came
again like onto the flesh of a little child, and he was clean."


From the Holy Bible (II Kings 5:14)

What is Phage Therapy? from Bacteriophage Therapy
by Alexander Sulakvelidze, Zemphira Alavidze, and J. Glenn Morris Jr.

"Prior to the discovery and widespread use of antibiotics, it was suggested that bacterial infections could be prevented and/or treated by the administration of bacteriophages. Although the early clinical studies with bacteriophages were not vigorously pursued in the United States and Western Europe, phages continued to be utilized in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. The results of these studies were extensively published in non-English (primarily Russian, Georgian, and Polish) journals and, therefore, were not readily available to the western scientific community. In this mini review, we briefly describe the history of bacteriophage discovery and the early clinical studies with phages and we review the recent literature emphasizing research conducted in Poland and the former Soviet Union. We also discuss the reasons that the clinical use of bacteriophages failed to take root in the West, and we share our thoughts about future prospects for phage therapy research.
Bacteriophages or phages are bacterial viruses that invade bacterial cells and, in the case of lytic phages, disrupt bacterial metabolism and cause the bacterium to lyse. The history of bacteriophage discovery has been the subject of lengthy debates, including a controversy over claims for priority. Ernest Hankin, a British bacteriologist, reported in 1896 on the presence of marked antibacterial activity (against Vibrio cholerae) which he observed in the waters of the Ganges and Jumna rivers in India, and he suggested that an unidentified substance (which passed through fine porcelain filters and was heat labile) was responsible for this phenomenon and for limiting the spread of cholera epidemics. Two years later, the Russian bacteriologist Gamaleya observed a similar phenomenon while working with Bacillus subtilis, and the observations of several other investigators are also thought to have been related to the bacteriophage phenomenon. However, none of these investigators further explored their findings until Frederick Twort, a medically trained bacteriologist from England, reintroduced the subject almost 20 (1915) years after Hankin's observation by reporting a similar phenomenon and advancing the hypothesis that it may have been due to, among other possibilities, a virus. However, for various reason sincluding financial difficulties Twort did not pursue this finding, and it was another 2 years before bacteriophages were "officially" discovered by Felix d'Herelle (1917), a French-Canadian microbiologist at the Institut Pasteur in Paris. The emergence of pathogenic bacteria resistant to most, if not all, currently available antimicrobial agents has become a critical problem in modern medicine, particularly because of the concomitant increase in immunosuppressed patients. The concern that humankind is reentering the "preantibiotics" era has become very real, and the development of alternative antiinfection modalities has become one of the highest priorities of modern medicine and biotechnology."

Once one accepts the fact that it requires microscopes to see the world of bacteria and bacteriophages, phage therapy may be compared to any biological control methodology and can conceptually be described as: What a cat is to a mouse the right bacteriophage is to a specific bacterium or superbug. Lytic phages are the weapons of mass destruction in the war with superbugs! And as can be seen above, phage therapy has been going on in nature as a balancing force in the evolution of microbes. Medical phage therapy is simply the intervention of humans to ensure that the balance is in favour of bacteriophages over susceptible bacterial pathogens!



References:


http://www.relax-well.co.uk/MRSA-information-2.html
http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/5-5-31/29150.html
http://www.cheminst.ca/sections/ottawa/phage.PDF
http://www.cheminst.ca/sections/ottawa/news/Ottawanews_spring2003.pdf

"Too many regulatory-scientific misadventures.
It's a time to be humble!
It's a time to apologize!"


This address to the Prime Minister of Canada by G.W.(Bill) Riedel PhD, MCIC is published here by Designs For Wellbeing at www.relax-well.co.uk with research and resources currently free of charge for the public.

Disclaimer: This information was produced as a public good. It is the opinion of the author based on extensive study of published literature. Readers are encouraged to study the references and additional literature to form their own opinion. This information may be referenced, used or quoted with or without giving credit to the author. It may be distributed, copied or stored by any means. Readers and users are responsible for any outcomes from any use of this information. Version dated March 5, 2006 and may be revised G.W. (Bill) Riedel.

'From the Jordan (2 Kings 5:1-14)
and Ganges rivers,
to the phage therapy centers  in Georgia
and .Poland,.
.
to the Wound Care Center.in Lubbock, Texas,
bacteriophages have, are and will continue to cure bacterial disease in spite of what phage therapy deniers say!'
GWR


phage and bacterium
Bacteriophage destroying a bacterium and replicating using the DNA.
© Image courtesy Dr. Anna Tanczos
, University of Surrey, UK





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Copyright © Grace Filby 2008