To be honest, it reminds me of bacteriophage therapy, which is a promising alternative to antibiotic therapy that desperately needs more research done for it in the face of the decreasing effectiveness of antibiotics.
One of the advantages of bacteriophage therapy is that what you are using here are living things, viruses, which breed inside the pathogen and nowhere else. Because of this you can through clever methodology create a medicine that evolves along with the threat its meant to destroy, and that way not lose effectiveness the way antibiotic resistance does.
One of the advantages of bacteriophage therapy is that what you are using here are living things, viruses, which breed inside the pathogen and nowhere else. Because of this you can through clever methodology create a medicine that evolves along with the threat its meant to destroy, and that way not lose effectiveness the way antibiotic resistance does.