Facebook Pixel Combating AMR with Bacteriophages | BioSpectrum Asia - business - Lisez cet article sur Magzter.com
Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Obtenez un accès illimité à plus de 9 000 magazines, journaux et articles Premium pour seulement

$149.99
 
$74.99/Année

Essayer OR - Gratuit

Combating AMR with Bacteriophages

BioSpectrum Asia

|

BioSpectrum Asia January 2024

India is among the countries with a high burden of antibiotic-resistant infections.

- Anusha Ashwin

Combating AMR with Bacteriophages

It is known that India faces a significant challenge when it comes to antibiotic resistance and the menace of superbugs (largely owing to overuse and misuse of antimicrobials). Reports say that the economic impact of superbugs is significant in our country. Even in the United States, treating antibiotic-resistant infections costs an estimated $2.2 billion in extra healthcare expenses each year. These costs include longer hospital stays, additional testing, and more expensive medications.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) warns that as these superbugs become more prevalent, our arsenal of effective antibiotics will become less potent. This makes routine medical procedures such as surgeries, chemotherapy, and organ transplants riskier due to the increased likelihood of infection.

This validates the immediate requirement as an alternative to antimicrobials and researchers trust their bet on bacteriophages as that alternative.

According to Rachna Dave, Founder & CEO of MicroGO, AMR is indeed a far more significant and pressing issue than it might initially appear, primarily due to underreporting. She says, "Estimates indicate that the toll of AMR could result in more than 10 million deaths by 2023. This looming crisis is exacerbated by the extremely limited availability of new antibiotics in the market, making it an incredibly challenging problem to address. In this dire context, bacteriophages are emerging as one of the most promising solutions to combat AMR infections. With the scarcity of effective antibiotics, bacteriophages offer a viable alternative. In India, there have been approximately 200 patients successfully treated with phage therapy, boasting an impressive success rate exceeding 80 per cent. This number is steadily increasing as more clinicians and infection prevention specialists embrace this innovative technology."

India - The land of abundant bacteriophages

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

India–EU FTA Paves Way for Expanded Healthcare Trade

On January 27, 2026, after years of negotiations, India and the European Union announced a landmark Free Trade Agreement.

time to read

4 mins

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

PreferCo and Glatt to open CoE for precision fermentation bioprocess scale-up in India

In a major boost to Government of India's BioE3 push, German major Glatt and India-based startup PreferCo have announced the launch of \"PreferCo-Glatt Centre of Excellence (CoE) for Bioprocess Scale-Up\" in Hyderabad's Genome Valley.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Women's Health Surge in APAC

The rising burden of diseases such as ovarian cancer, breast cancer, cervical cancer, infertility, etc. is emerging as the key driver of the women's healthcare market across the globe. While North America led the women healthcare market in 2025, Asia Pacific (APAC) is expected to witness the fastest growth this year onwards. As a result, governments across the APAC region, are recognising the importance of women's health and are launching initiatives, particularly under female leaders, to improve access to healthcare services. Moreover, a number of women-led startups are now developing new solutions to address this growing burden of women-associated diseases in the APAC region. Let's take a closer look.

time to read

6 mins

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Hanchor Bio receives US FDA Orphan Drug Designation for HCB101 in gastric cancer

Taiwan-based biotech startup HanchorBio, Inc. has announced that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Orphan Drug Designation (ODD) to HCB101 for the treatment of gastric cancer.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Daiichi Sankyo names Dr John Tsai as Global Head of R&D

Japan-based Daiichi Sankyo Company has appointed Dr John Tsai to succeed Dr Ken Takeshita, who is stepping down as Global Head of R&D, effective April 1, 2026.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

"The global trend is moving beyond centralised hubs toward distributed networks and domestic capability"

King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSHRC) and US-based Germfree Laboratories have announced a strategic partnership to develop Saudi Arabia's first fully integrated, modular Advanced Therapy Medicinal Product (ATMP) Manufacturing Campus.

time to read

4 mins

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

SEOUL'S RISKY DRUG PRICING RESET

Drug pricing has once again moved to the centre of policy debate in South Korea, with the government recently stepping back from its proposed generic drug pricing reform.

time to read

2 mins

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Takeda and Iambic sign $1.7 B deal to advance AI driven design of small molecules

Iambic, a US-based clinical-stage life science and technology company developing novel medicines using its artificial intelligence (AI)-driven discovery and development platform, has announced a multi-year technology and discovery collaboration agreement with Japan-based Takeda Pharma that will use Iambic's industry leading AI drug discovery models to advance a select set of high-priority small molecule programmes, initially in Takeda's Oncology and Gastrointestinal and Inflammation therapeutic areas.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

S.Biomedics announces partnership with Catalent to develop and manufacture TED-A9

US-based Catalent and South Korea-based S.Biomedics have announced a strategic partnership to support the development and manufacturing of TED-A9, S.Biomedics' allogeneic pluripotent stem-cell-derived ventral midbrain-specific dopaminergic precursor cell therapy being developed for the treatment of Parkinson's disease.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

China revises drug administration regulations to spur innovation

China has revised regulations concerning drug administration in a bid to promote drug innovation, strengthen management of online sales of medicines and reinforce drug safety supervision.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia March 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size