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Prophylaxis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv Infection in a Preclinical Mouse Model via Inhalation of Nebulized Bacteriophage D29.

Nicholas B CarrigySasha E LarsenValerie ReeseTiffany PecorMelissa HarrisonPhilip J KuehlGraham F HatfullDominic SauvageauSusan L BaldwinWarren H FinlayRhea N ColerReinhard Vehring
Published in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2019)
Globally, more people die annually from tuberculosis than from any other single infectious agent. Unfortunately, there is no commercially-available vaccine that is sufficiently effective at preventing acquisition of pulmonary tuberculosis in adults. In this study, pre-exposure prophylactic pulmonary delivery of active aerosolized anti-tuberculosis bacteriophage D29 was evaluated as an option for protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. An average bacteriophage concentration of approximately 1 PFU/alveolus was achieved in the lungs of mice using a nose-only inhalation device optimized with a dose simulation technique and adapted for use with a vibrating mesh nebulizer. Within 30 minutes of bacteriophage delivery, the mice received either a low dose (∼50-100 CFU), or an ultra-low dose (∼5-10 CFU), of M. tuberculosis H37Rv aerosol to the lungs. A prophylactic effect was observed with bacteriophage aerosol pre-treatment significantly decreasing M. tuberculosis burden in mouse lungs 24 hours and 3 weeks post-challenge (p < 0.05). These novel results indicate that a sufficient dose of nebulized mycobacteriophage aerosol to the lungs may be a valuable intervention to provide extra protection to health care professionals and other individuals at risk of exposure to M. tuberculosis.
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