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About the Author

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Works by Steffanie Strathdee

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Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Relationships
Patterson, Thomas L. (husband)
Nationality
Canada
Associated Place (for map)
Canada

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Reviews

6 reviews
As a scientist, this was an absolutely fascinating read. As a human being, if I hadn't known the ending, I would have found it extremely stressful, but I am so glad I read it! Steffanie Strathdee, an infectious disease epidemiologist, whose major work has been on AIDS, partners with her husband Thomas Patterson, also a researcher, who works on life experiences and the resulting behaviors that can put people at greater risk of catching AIDS. A second marriage for both of them, they take some show more very "out there" trips. This one was to Egypt where they hired a guide to take them to the pyramids and other fascinating places. In the middle of the trip, Tom becomes seriously ill with antibiotic-resistant bacteria, leading ultimately to a medivac back home and several months of intensive care with Tom in a coma, almost losing his life several times. There are some high energy, screamingly tense times in this true story and we get to see Steffanie as the scientist and the wife. Incredibly well-written and fascinating story of how she and the doctors treating her husband come up with an old treatment that had never been used in this country due to the prevalence of antibiotics. Highly recommended for both scientists and lay people as an extremely exciting read. The best news is that their success is likely to lead to novel treatments for people suffering and dying from antibiotic-resistant infections. show less
The Perfect Predator: A Scientist's Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug by Steffanie Strathdee and Thomas Patterson (with Teresa Barker) is a very highly recommended medical memoir of the fight of a life time that reads like a futuristic fictional medical thriller/mystery.

Steffanie Strathdee is a disease epidemiologist focused on infectious diseases, while her husband Tom Patterson is an evolutionary sociobiologist and an experimental psychologist. The "second time around" couple show more who had been married eleven years, were empty nesters with a passion for travel. Between the two of them, they had traveled to over fifty countries. To plan a trip to Egypt over Thanksgiving in 2015 seemed natural. While vacationing Tom came down with what seemed like food poisoning, but quickly turned critical. In an Egyptian clinic, doctors diagnosed pancreatitis, which was found later to be complicated by a football-sized pseudocyst infected with an antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

After two emergency medvac flights, Tom was hospitalized near his home at the UC San Diego medical center. Now Tom was fighting one of the most dangerous, antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the world, and seemed to be losing the battle. After several bouts of septic shock, Tom goes into coma and is placed on a ventilator. There isn't an antibiotic left to treat the bacterial infection and the situation is dire, when Steffanie gears up into professional research mode and pursues the idea that phage therapy could be the solution. She contacts researchers around the world, explains the situation, and asks if they are using phages in their research that could fight the specific bacteria Tom is fighting. Researchers from Texas A&M, and a Navy biomedical center are among the few that step up to help. This is not as easy as it sounds because she also has to go through the FDA for this unapproved treatment.

This book is a page-turner and the action is just as heart-stopping as any fictional thriller, perhaps even more so because this is a real life battle. I was totally immersed in the drama of Tom's illness and Steffanie's determination. Most of the story is told through Steffanie's perspective since Tom was out of it or in a coma. There are short interludes of the dreams/hallucinations that Tom experienced while in the coma. In the age of increasing multi-drug-resistant bacterial infections, this case may be singular at first glance, but cases like Tom's will be on the increase. Bacteria are evolving much faster than the development of new antibiotics. Much of this is because of the very real over prescribing and over use of antibiotics.

The writing is excellent and clearly presents the story in the sequence of the events as they happened. There is hope and humor in Steffanie's story, as she clearly loves Tom and is devoted to the life they have together. She is also fiercely intelligent. Along with the details of Tom's illness, the history of antibiotics is presented, and her research into phages and how they operate. This is a love story, medical mystery, gripping drama, historical chronicle, and completely captivating true-life story.

Disclosure: My review copy was courtesy of Hachette Books.
http://www.shetreadssoftly.com/2019/03/the-perfect-predator.html
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Gentlemen, it is the microbes who will have the last word.
- attributed to Louis Pasteur

Perfect Predator is a page-turning, true-life medical thriller. At times I felt like I was reading a Michael Crichton novel. The science is fascinating and scary. Superbugs - bacteria resistant to all existing antibiotics - are becoming more prevalent due to overuse both in medical treatment and as growth enhancers in livestock. Dr. Thomas Patterson contracted what was thought to be the worst superbug, show more Acinetobacter baumanni. One day, after Tom had been at death's door for two and a half months, his wife, Dr. Steffanie Strathdee, an infectious disease epidemiologist, decided it was time to take matters into her own hands and began searching on the internet for a treatment. What she found turned out to be the "Perfect Predator". It involved therapy using bacteriophages - viruses that attack bacteria - to kill the bacteria. Phage therapy had been researched over 100 years ago, but the research was "relegated to the back burner" after penicillin was discovered and put on the market. Although it was still being researched for various applications, she could find no evidence that it had been used to treat humans infected with Tom's superbug. She goes on to describe how she consulted and worked with teams of people from various organizations who eventually succeeded in saving Tom's life.

Just as compelling as the science in this story is the emotional journey that Steff and Tom went through during the several months Tom was in the hospital. There is a lot of detail about how the family coped during the difficult months when Tom was very sick. The section describing his months of recovery is short in comparison, and I would have enjoyed learning more about that. One thing that struck me was how once the ordeal was over the couple was able to compare notes about the experience.

"Every medical case is lived twice: once in the wards and once in the memory," wrote Siddhartha Mkherjee, physician and author, paraphrasing the writer Viet Thanh Nguyen. For a couple or a family, every medical case is lived twice more: alone and together. Each of us had our own version of the illness experience as it affected us individually. Our shared version as a family was a patchwork of pieces that came together more slowly with time and conversations. It was another kind of healing."

I'm sure anyone who has been through a medical catastrophe with a loved one can relate.

Because of the success of Tom's case, five other patients were successfully treated with phage therapy by the time the book was published. Also, thanks to generous funding, Tom and Steff have launched a phage center research center. While there is now a glimmer of hope, much research needs to be done before an there is an answer to the dangers of antibiotic resistance. It starts with ending the indiscriminate use of antibiotics.
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½
It’s an incredibly gripping story. But I just couldn’t shake my feeling of why? Why spend probably millions of dollars on one person (before the virus treatment with the potential, eventually, to help others) when there are so many with no healthcare at all? It’s a question I ask myself about most of the resources in our world but this story really highlighted where our health systems have gone wrong.

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Works
1
Members
222
Popularity
#100,928
Rating
4.1
Reviews
6
ISBNs
8

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