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Showing posts from May 3, 2026

From Experimental Promise to Clinical Reality: Why Phage Therapy Must Enter the Era of Evidence-Based Medicine

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For more than a century, bacteriophages have existed at the margins of Western medicine, simultaneously recognized as remarkably precise antibacterial agents and dismissed as biologically unpredictable. Today, as antimicrobial resistance continues to escalate worldwide, this perception is beginning to change. Phage therapy is no longer viewed solely as an experimental alternative reserved for compassionate use cases. Instead, it is increasingly being considered a serious therapeutic platform capable of complementing or, in some situations, replacing conventional antibiotics. Yet despite growing enthusiasm, the field now faces a decisive challenge: moving beyond isolated clinical successes toward reproducible, evidence-driven medicine. The Phage Therapy Recent perspectives published in Nature Communications argue that the future of phage therapy will depend less on discovering new phages and more on understanding the biological principles that determine why treatments succeed or fail. T...

Controlling Evolution with Bacteriophages: A Hypermutagenic System Redefining Directed Evolution in Microbiology

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Bacteriophages have long been regarded as both predators and partners of bacterial life, shaping microbial ecosystems through cycles of infection, replication, and lysis. Yet beyond their ecological role, phages are increasingly emerging as powerful tools for engineering biology itself. In the context of phage therapy and synthetic biology, a central challenge persists: how to accelerate evolution in a controlled and targeted manner, without losing the ability to interpret the underlying genetic changes. A recent study introduces a system that addresses this challenge by transforming the phage life cycle into a programmable engine for rapid and selective evolution. The Phage Therapy Traditional directed evolution methods rely on iterative cycles of mutation and selection, often requiring manual intervention at each step. While effective, these approaches are inherently slow and limited in scale. More recent continuous evolution systems have improved throughput but at the cost of contro...

Most Consulted Articles

History Part 12 : Post-War Stagnation and Phage Therapy’s Marginalization in the West (1945–1980s)

The Phage Therapy in the spotlight !

Groundbreaking achievement : Phagos raises €25m to end bacterial disease

EMA : Guideline on quality aspects of phage therapy medicinal products

EUCAST creates a Subcommittee on Phage susceptibility testing