This purpose of this clinical trial is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of a bacteriophage therapy in a patient with a methicillin-susceptible Enterococcus faecium (E. faecium) prosthetic joint infection (PJI) of the hip. We have exhausted all surgical and medical management of PJI for our patient. The phage will be administered to the study patient during a 14 days period via intravenous and intra-articular. The patient will be monitored in clinic for up to 1 year.
This is a single-patient study, to assess a treatment option for a case of a recurrent methicillin-susceptible E. faecium infection in a prosthetic hip joint. The patient has repeatedly failed standard of care medical and surgical management. Given the severity and chronicity of E. faecium infection and burden of infected hardware, the only option to achieve surgical source control would involve an aggressive, high risk surgical approach: a high amputation of the left leg to remove infected hardware and peri-implant bone and tissues. In the absence of any viable adjunctive antimicrobial therapy, this patient is at high risk of mortality and morbidity. It is therefore paramount that we explore alternative treatment modalities for the management of this infection, such as bacteriophage (phage) therapy. The primary objective of this study is to investigate the preliminary efficacy, safety, and tolerability of systemic (intravenous) and intra-articular administration of a lytic phage (in our patient with chronic E. faecium PJI. Secondary objectives will be documenting clinical changes pre- and post-therapy, as well as identifying adjunctive changes in biomarkers (C-reactive protein \[CRP\], erythrocyte sedimentation rate \[ESR\], and interleukin-6 \[IL-6\]) correlated with PJI as well as phage titres. In this study, lytic phage prepared in injection-grade saline will be administered to the patient both intravenously and intraarticularly, twice a day for a duration of 14 days. In addition to phage therapy, the patient will receive standard of care antibiotic therapy. The patient will remain in clinical follow-up for up to one year.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
Our phage is an investigational treatment for bacterial infections. Our lytic phage preparation was provided by Cytophage Technologies (CIP-200).
Concordia Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Safety of phage therapy
Reactions and adverse events to the treatment
Time frame: Day 0 to 1 year from treatment
Efficacy of phage therapy
No recurrence of the infection
Time frame: 1 Year
Tolerability of phage therapy
Reactions and adverse events to the intravenous and intra-articular administration
Time frame: Day 0 to Day 13 of treatment
Changes in biomarkers (C-reactive protein)
Serum C-reactive protein (mg/L) as measured at baseline
Time frame: Day 0 to 1 year from treatment
Changes in biomarkers (erythrocyte sedimentation rate)
Serum erythrocyte sedimentation rate (mm/hr) as measured at baseline
Time frame: Day 0 to 1 year from treatment
Changes in biomarkers (interleukin-6)
Serum interleukin-6 (pg/mL) as measured at baseline
Time frame: Day 0 to 1 year from treatment
Changes in biomarkers (phage titres)
Phage particles present in a given volume of liquid (PFU/mL)
Time frame: Day 0 to Day 13 of treatment
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NONE
Enrollment
1