Indexé dans
  • Base de données des revues académiques
  • Genamics JournalSeek
  • Clés académiques
  • JournalTOCs
  • Infrastructure nationale des connaissances en Chine (CNKI)
  • Scimago
  • Accès à la recherche mondiale en ligne sur l'agriculture (AGORA)
  • Bibliothèque des revues électroniques
  • RechercheRef
  • Répertoire d'indexation des revues de recherche (DRJI)
  • Université Hamdard
  • EBSCO AZ
  • OCLC - WorldCat
  • Catalogue en ligne SWB
  • Bibliothèque virtuelle de biologie (vifabio)
  • Publions
  • MIAR
  • Commission des bourses universitaires
  • Fondation genevoise pour la formation et la recherche médicales
  • Pub européen
  • Google Scholar
Partager cette page
Dépliant de journal
Flyer image

Abstrait

Viruses That Can Cure, When Antibiotics Fail...

Verbeken G, Pirnay JP, Lavigne R, Ceulemans C, De Vos D and Huys I

 

Resistance of bacteria to antibiotics just keeps growing. Industry’s antibiotic pipeline is running dry. Before the pharmaceutical development of antibiotics, natural bacteriophages (=bacterial viruses) were commercialised and used to kill pathogenic bacteria. This therapeutic application of natural bacteriophages was called “bacteriophage therapy”. Today, countries like Poland, Georgia and Russia are still practising bacteriophage therapy. The European Union and “modern” medicine as a whole needs an urgent return of bacteriophage therapy as part of its armamentarium to fight bacterial resistance to antibiotics. This paper reflects on the issue and proposes a European regulatory frame that could fit the re-introduction of bacteriophage therapy without losing sight of safety, quality and efficacy aspects.