John Haverty was ready to have his leg amputated.
Haverty, 62, of Brownsville, Minn., had 17 surgeries over a decade to rid his right leg of a stubborn infection that lingered after knee-implant surgery. He had no way of knowing his eventual cure lay in a bacteria-killing virus known as a phage, found writhing in a sewer treatment plant.
In February, before Haverty knew anything about phages, his doctor at Mayo Clinic leveled with him: Antibiotics were proving ineffective against the klebsiella pneumoniae bugs causing Haverty's infection, and he would probably grow so weary of surgeries that he would eventually opt to have the leg removed at the hip.
"You are going to tell me when you want your leg amputated," Haverty recalled his doctor telling him. "We're not going to tell you."
Haverty and his wife soon went shopping for a post-amputation wheelchair, but he kept looking for answers online.
Many leads went nowhere. Then, one day, a response e-mail arrived from a company called Adaptive Phage Therapeutics in Gaithersburg, Md. The e-mail would trigger a series of events that would prevent Haverty's planned amputation by getting rid of the infection.
Haverty, it turned out, was just the 14th person worldwide treated with a phage (rhymes with "rage") selected by Adapative Phage Therapeutics (APT). He was also the first patient treated in the nascent phage-therapy program at Mayo Clinic in Rochester.
The rising incidence of "superbugs," which have evolved to resist human-made antibiotics, is driving renewed interest in phage therapy. Researchers say phages are the most common organisms on the planet. Experimental efforts a century ago to harness phages for infections faded from mainstream science partly because antibiotic drugs worked so well and were relatively cheap.