Bacteriophage therapy A study from 2019 supported the capability of
phages in killing resistant bacteria unable to be treated with antibiotics. Research laboratories came together to find these phages by collecting, isolating, and exposing them to resistant
M. abscessus that had been isolated from a patient in London.
In vitro A bacteriophage known as Muddy had proved effective at killing the patient's distinct
M. abscessus strain (GD01), while phages like ZoeJ and BPs had reduced capabilities at infecting GD01. A mixture of phages, Muddy and engineered versions of ZoeJ and BPs, though, completely infected and killed GD01.
In vivo A cocktail of bacteriophages, Muddy, ZoeJ, and BPs, effectively killed a strain of
M. abscessus in vitro. The potential this showed encouraged the commencement of patient treatments towards the GD01 infection. Every 12 hours, the patient received a treatment of the bacteriophage cocktail. One day of treatment showed high bacteriophage levels in the bloodstream. This suggested that they were being released into the
bloodstream and replicating to infect bacteria. No significant side effects were reported. The right phages were found for this patient, but a different strain may be sensitive to different phages. ==Type strain==