Recent News 10 : US Navy at the top of phage research !
NMR&D Reaches Milestones in Six Year CDRMP Focused Program Award for Bacteriophage Therapy
11 June 2025
(c) From Elliott Page - Naval Medical Research Command
All credit goes to
: https://www.med.navy.mil/Media/News/Article/4209316/nmrd-reaches-milestones-in-six-year-cdrmp-focused-program-award-for-bacteriopha/
" The landscape of bacterial health threats is ever
evolving and poses a significant risk to the readiness of the U.S. military,
whose members are frequently exposed to bacteria through combat injuries and
deployments to overseas locations.
Navy Medicine Research & Development (NMR&D) is engaged in
bacteriophage therapy research to protect the warfighter from these threats,
keeping U.S. forces ready and lethal.
Starting in fiscal year 2019, and over the course of a six-year funding period
awarded by Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs (CDMRP),
NMR&D fulfilled major priorities in research focusing on bacteriophages (or
phages), viruses that target and kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Naval
Medical Research Command (NMRC) worked alongside U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
and Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR), sharing research efforts in
protecting the service member population. NMRC’s headquarters and WRAIR are
co-located, creating a seamless, collaborative environment for those shared
efforts.
“The greatest accomplishment [during this funding period] has been bringing
the full capabilities of researchers across Navy Medicine Research &
Development jointly alongside Army Medicine R&D to accelerate advancements
in this technology,” said Cmdr. Mark Simons, director of NMRC’s Infectious
Diseases Directorate. “When harnessed and focused on top priorities, Navy
Medicine and DoD researchers have incredible multidisciplinary capabilities to
advance medical technologies in support of warfighter medical gaps.”
Phage cocktails can contain various combinations of phages, designed to attack
specific bacteria. The four bacterial pathogens targeted during this research
period were Acinetobacter baumannii, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas
aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus, all of which can cause fevers, fatigue
and swelling. In the absence of a phage cocktail (specifically, one that has
been made ready through purification and sequencing), there are no targeted
approaches for combating certain bacterial pathogens. Antibiotics can kill all
varieties of bacteria in the body, both good and bad, unlike phages, which can
be targeted to only kill harmful bacteria.
NMRC’s pillar objectives during this award were to establish processes and
technologies to develop bacteriophage cocktails for treatment of bacterial
infections, and to develop fully-characterized products that will be the
foundation for advancement into human clinical trials and eventual Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) licensure.
A fully-developed phage cocktail for patient treatment could allow medical
professionals to precisely treat service members who are exposed to
multidrug-resistant bacteria. This capability, depending on the type of
bacterial infection, would allow infected service members to be treated
intravenously, topically or both, to more rapidly restore combat strength and
return to their missions on behalf of the U.S.
“We collect these phages, purify them and grow them in large quantities,”
explained Dr. Biswajit Biswas, chief of NMRC’s Bacteriophage Science Division.
“Then, we extract DNA, sequence its genome and analyze the phage very carefully
to understand if it carries any toxins, since we cannot push something in the
human systems if the phage carries toxins.”
FREDERICK, Md. (April 11, 2025) Researchers with Naval
Medical Research Command (NMRC) conduct bacteriophage therapy research to
combat multidrug resistant bacteria that could impact warfighter readiness.
Phages are viruses that target and kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Navy
Medicine Research & Development (NMR&D) is engaged in bacteriophage
therapy research to protect the warfighter from these threats, keeping U.S.
forces ready and lethal. NMRC, headquarters of NMR&D, is engaged in a broad
spectrum of activity from basic science in the laboratory to field studies in
austere and remote areas of the world to investigations in operational
environments. In support of Navy, Marine Corps and joint U.S. warfighter
health, readiness and lethality, researchers study infectious diseases,
biological warfare detection and defense, combat casualty care, environmental
health concerns, aerospace and undersea medicine, operational mission support
and epidemiology. For 250 years, Navy Medicine, represented by more than 44,000
highly-trained military and civilian healthcare professionals, has delivered
quality healthcare and enduring expeditionary medical support to the warfighter
on, below, and above the sea and ashore. (U.S. Navy photo by Elliott Page
/Released)
Currently, NMRC’s labs have developed approximately 2,500
phage cocktails. Phages are one of the most abundant biological substance on
earth, even outnumbering bacteria. Strung together, all of the phages on earth
could encircle the Milky Way Galaxy three times. The effort to amass a library
of over 2,000 phages is one that NMRC, fellow NMR&D commands and partner
nations take on proudly, as this collection can be used for years to come to
support development of novel treatments for infections.
One of eight NMR&D commands, Naval Medical Research Unit (NAMRU) SOUTH,
which conducts research on infectious diseases in South America, was the
primary partner and supplier of phage isolates for the phage collection effort
in this research period.
"As part of our Antimicrobial Resistance research surveillance efforts,
NAMRU SOUTH has a unique and expanding repository of clinically relevant
multidrug resistant bacterial samples,” said Dr. Henju Marjuki, chief science
officer with NAMRU SOUTH.
“These locally-collected strains are ideal candidates for identifying
diverse new phages that could change clinical outcomes for hard-to-treat
organisms,” continued Marjuki. “These phages and their host strains have been
previously sent to NMRC to be included in the development of a large
globally-sourced library of phages that could eventually be used for
personalized therapeutic cocktails, consisting of a mixture of different
bacteriophages aimed at various bacterial species.”
The collection of phage particles can be an intricate process. Collection
efforts span the globe, with phages collected from wastewater (bogs, sewers,
rivers, etc.) and put through several rounds of purification and
characterization before being developed into therapeutic cocktails, ensuring
the phage is safe and effective for use.
NMRC’s phage library also includes phages from WRAIR collected in Thailand,
Kenya, and Georgia.
“WRAIR’s Forward Labs coordinated very closely with the WRAIR Wound Infections
Department to harvest new bacteriophages on four continents,” said Dr. Mikeljon
Nikolich, chief of Bacteriophage Therapeutics with WRAIR. “This network was a
key engine in the Army-Navy collaborative effort to develop phage cocktails
against multidrug-resistant infections.
NMRC has a record of success in treating illness with bacteriophage therapy
resulting from their research and phage library. In 2015, Tom Patterson, a
doctor who fell critically ill from Acinetobacter baumannii (nicknamed
Iraqibacter from the early days of the Iraq war where infected soldiers would
fall ill from the bacteria), fell into a coma, and remained ill through
multiple treatments, until he was administered an NMRC developed cocktail
intravenously. “This is important,” Biswas said. “It should be
understood that before Tom Patterson’s case, nobody used phage to treat
systemic bacterial infection in the United States.
Patterson’s successful treatment set the stage for what NMRC hopes to
accomplish with phage therapy research—administering phage to humans as an
FDA-approved medicine.
“NRMC’s next focus for phage research is Investigational New Drug
applications with the FDA, to move the most promising cocktails into phase one
safety and immune response studies,” said Simons. “There is still work to do to
support the application and manufacturing standardization for an early human
study with these new phage cocktail prototypes."
Leading research efforts in bacteriophage research on behalf of the warfighter
is part of the U.S. Navy’s mission to support the DoD in peacetime and wartime.
“It is important that the Navy lead the charge in phage therapy research,”
Simons explained. “Navy and Marine Corps warfighters are often first to the
fight as expeditionary units, and thus will experience early casualties in a
potentially prolonged-care setting. This will require novel antimicrobial
countermeasures to be used early and throughout the continuum of care to treat
antibiotic-resistant infections which are rising globally and highly prevalent
in developing countries and high-conflict regions.”
The impact of bacteriophage therapy research to the military population cannot
be understated.
“Navy Medicine R&D is a leader in bacteriophage research so that we can
bring this promising technology to clinicians and corpsman to improve
battlefield survival for Sailors and Marines,” Simons added.
The phage libraries, processes, technologies, evaluation pipelines and
expertise gained throughout the course of the CDRMP award effort will inform
the DoD’s Bacteriophage R&D program as NMRC and WRAIR continue to jointly
advance the technology and treatment of deployed military service members.
For 250 years, Navy Medicine, represented by more than 44,000 highly-trained
military and civilian healthcare professionals, has delivered quality
healthcare and enduring expeditionary medical support to the warfighter on,
below, and above the sea and ashore.
NMR&D, a global collective of eight commands, conducts research in support
of Navy, Marine Corps and joint U.S. warfighter health, readiness and
lethality, across a broad spectrum of activity from basic science in the
laboratory to field studies in austere and remote areas of the world to
investigations in operational environments. NMR&D studies infectious
diseases, biological warfare detection and defense, combat casualty care,
environmental health concerns, directed energy health effects, aerospace and
undersea medicine, medical modeling, simulation, operational mission support,
epidemiology and behavioral sciences.
NMRC, headquarters of Navy Medicine Research & Development, is engaged in a
broad spectrum of activity from basic science in the laboratory to field
studies in austere and remote areas of the world to investigations in
operational environments. In support of Navy, Marine Corps and joint U.S.
warfighter health, readiness and lethality, researchers study infectious
diseases, biological warfare detection and defense, combat casualty care,
environmental health concerns, aerospace and undersea medicine, operational
mission support and epidemiology."
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