Posts

Showing posts from June 8, 2025

Recent News 15: UCLA Samueli Announces Class of 2025 Awardees and Commencement Student Presenters

Image
UCLA Samueli Announces Class of 2025 Awardees and Commencement Student Presenters Every year, the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering honors new graduates who have made special contributions and have distinguished accomplishments. The following is an overview of the 2025 schoolwide award recipients and presenters. Additional class of 2025 awardees are listed on the school’s commencement awardee page. Photo : (c) https://samueli.ucla.edu/ucla-samueli-announces-2025-awardees/ HARRY M. SHOWMAN PRIZE (graduate) Yanxi (Steven) Yang Chemical Engineering Doctor of Philosophy, Spring 2025 Yanxi (Steven) Yang is graduating with a Ph.D. in chemical engineering. During his time at UCLA, Yang has been an ambassador for biomedical engineering, highlighting the discipline’s real-world impacts. His podcast, “Phage Therapy Today,” aims to bridge the information gap between academia and clinical practice by exploring the potential of bioengineered drug delivery. The program has garnered more than 7,000 ...

Paper 3 : Phage Therapy May Treat Drug Resistance in Patients With Cystic Fibrosis, Study Finds

Image
Phage Therapy May Treat Drug Resistance in Patients With Cystic Fibrosis, Study Finds June 13, 2025 "Yale's university researchers find a new approach to combatting antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial resistance, in which germs like bacteria and fungi no longer respond to medicines, is a rising global threat. When antibiotics and other drugs become ineffective, infections can become difficult or impossible to treat, leading to an increase in the spread and severity of disease. In a new study, published in Nature Medicine , a team of researchers at the Center for Phage Biology and Therapy at Yale discovered a novel approach that may revolutionize the fight against antimicrobial resistance. Jon Koff, MD, with a patient Credit: Robert A. Lisak For the study, the research team investigated the use of phage therapy—the use of viruses, or phages, to target and kill bacteria—to help patients with cystic fibrosis, a disease in which antimicrobial resistance is a significant issue....

Recent News 14 : Phage Therapy 2025: A Promising Market at the Crossroads of Innovation and Regulation

Image
Reigniting the War on Superbugs: The Global Rise of Phage Therapy as a Market and Medical Breakthrough 1. Introduction: A Renaissance in Microbial Medicine As antimicrobial resistance (AMR) reaches catastrophic levels worldwide, the search for viable alternatives to conventional antibiotics has become one of the most pressing priorities in global health. Once overlooked by Western medicine in the post-antibiotic era, phage therapy is experiencing a scientific and commercial revival. Bacteriophages—viruses that specifically infect and destroy bacteria—are no longer seen as relics of early 20th-century microbiology. Instead, they are emerging as precision-engineered therapeutics capable of addressing a medical crisis that conventional antibiotics can no longer control. According to a recent report by InsightAce Analytic Pvt. Ltd., the global phage therapy market is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20.50% between 2025 and 2034 . This rapid expansion is drive...

Recent News 13 : First Cancer Patient Dosed in Groundbreaking CRISPR-Engineered Phage Therapy: SNIPR Biome Advances SNIPR001 into Phase 1b Trial

Image
First Cancer Patient Dosed in Groundbreaking CRISPR-Engineered Phage Therapy: SNIPR Biome Advances SNIPR001 into Phase 1b Trial Copenhagen-based biotech SNIPR Biome has reached a major milestone, today the 12th of June, in the development of precision antimicrobials by dosing the first cancer patient in its Phase 1b clinical trial of SNIPR001 , a next-generation therapy that harnesses the power of CRISPR-Cas systems combined with bacteriophage technology. This innovative approach marks a significant advancement in the fight against antimicrobial resistance, particularly in vulnerable haematological cancer patients undergoing stem cell transplantation —a population at heightened risk of life-threatening bacterial infections. Trial Overview and Patient Population The Phase 1b study is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 24 patients with haematological malignancies across eight leading clinical centers in the United States . These patients are undergoing...

Recent News 12 : UK makes Its First Reglementation For Industrial Phage Production !

Image
Press release Helping bring phage medicines to UK patients – guidance for industry Bacteriophages – viruses that selectively fight bacteria – may offer new hope in fighting infections and tackling antimicrobial resistance. Bacteriophages attaching to bacterium. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has today the 4th of June published the UK’s first official guidance to support the safe development and use of phage therapies – treatments that use viruses to target and destroy harmful bacteria. The guidance aims to help researchers and companies develop phage-based medicines that meet UK safety, quality and efficacy standards, so they can be made available to patients who need them most. It covers both combined phage products designed for common infections and circulating strains, as well as personalised phage therapies that are tailored for individual patients with rare or highly resistant infections. For patients, this could mean access to phage...

Recent News 11 : Israeli Study Determines Potential of Phage Therapy for Diabetic Foot Ulcer Treatment

Image
Israeli Study Determines Potential of Diabetic Foot Ulcer Treatment !  The Hadassah Medical Organization’s Profs. Ran Nir-Paz, Hadil Onallah, Yechiel N. Gellman, Amir Haze, Danna Dror, Yonatan Oster, Meir Cherniak and Fabienne Attal are part of the team of authors from Israel and Portugal who conducted a study to determine the safety of a bacteriophage mixture for treating diabetic foot infections. Bacteriophages are viruses that attack and kill bacteria. They are highly specific and do not infect or kill other types of cells. Bacteriophages are used in phage therapy to treat bacterial infections, particularly those that are resistant to antibiotics or for which standard treatments are otherwise ineffective. Their clinical trial tested, on 19 participants, a bacteriophage mixture, TP-102, in diabetic patients with both infected and non-infected foot ulcers and showed that TP-102 was safe and well tolerated when applied directly to the wound, offering a groundbreaking trea...

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...