Antibiotic resistence:
The last resort
“To me the most exciting perspective is the ability to tap this large resource of antimicrobial drugs that have not survived the pipeline,” says Hardt. That is especially important, he adds, because even as antibiotics are rendered less useful with the spread of drug resistance, companies are generally not as interested in developing new antibiotics as they are in making other types of drugs — for instance, expensive cancer treatments.
Furthermore, “new classes of antibiotics tend to be put into the drawer”, to prevent them becoming overused, Hardt says. “Antibody conjugates could help us revisit drugs and thereby help to fill the empty pipeline.”
by Erika Check Hayden
04 november 2015