Cargando…

Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI)

BACKGROUND: Surgical sutures can promote migration of bacteria and thus start infections. Antiseptic coating of sutures may inhibit proliferation of adhered bacteria and avoid such complications. OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the inhibition of viable adhering bacteria on novel antimicrobially...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Obermeier, Andreas, Schneider, Jochen, Harrasser, Norbert, Tübel, Jutta, Mühlhofer, Heinrich, Pförringer, Dominik, von Deimling, Constantin, Foehr, Peter, Kiefel, Barbara, Krämer, Christina, Stemberger, Axel, Schieker, Matthias, Burgkart, Rainer, von Eisenhart-Rothe, Rüdiger
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5760023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29315313
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190912
_version_ 1783291310637056000
author Obermeier, Andreas
Schneider, Jochen
Harrasser, Norbert
Tübel, Jutta
Mühlhofer, Heinrich
Pförringer, Dominik
von Deimling, Constantin
Foehr, Peter
Kiefel, Barbara
Krämer, Christina
Stemberger, Axel
Schieker, Matthias
Burgkart, Rainer
von Eisenhart-Rothe, Rüdiger
author_facet Obermeier, Andreas
Schneider, Jochen
Harrasser, Norbert
Tübel, Jutta
Mühlhofer, Heinrich
Pförringer, Dominik
von Deimling, Constantin
Foehr, Peter
Kiefel, Barbara
Krämer, Christina
Stemberger, Axel
Schieker, Matthias
Burgkart, Rainer
von Eisenhart-Rothe, Rüdiger
author_sort Obermeier, Andreas
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Surgical sutures can promote migration of bacteria and thus start infections. Antiseptic coating of sutures may inhibit proliferation of adhered bacteria and avoid such complications. OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the inhibition of viable adhering bacteria on novel antimicrobially coated surgical sutures using chlorhexidine or octenidine, a critical factor for proliferation at the onset of local infections. The medical need, a rapid eradication of bacteria in wounds, can be fulfilled by a high antimicrobial efficacy during the first days after wound closure. METHODS: As a pretesting on antibacterial efficacy against relevant bacterial pathogens a zone of inhibition assay was conducted with middle ranged concentrated suture coatings (22 μg/cm). For further investigation of adhering bacteria in detail the most clinically relevant Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC(®)49230™) was used. Absorbable braided sutures were coated with chlorhexidine-laurate, chlorhexidine-palmitate, octenidine-laurate, and octenidine-palmitate. Each coating type resulted in 11, 22, or 33 μg/cm drug content on sutures. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was performed once to inspect the coating quality and twice to investigate if bacteria have colonized on sutures. Adhesion experiments were assessed by exposing coated sutures to S. aureus suspensions for 3 h at 37°C. Subsequently, sutures were sonicated and the number of viable bacteria released from the suture surface was determined. Furthermore, the number of viable planktonic bacteria was measured in suspensions containing antimicrobial sutures. Commercially available sutures without drugs (Vicryl(®), PGA Resorba(®), and Gunze PGA), as well as triclosan-containing Vicryl(®) Plus were used as control groups. RESULTS: Zone of inhibition assay documented a multispecies efficacy of novel coated sutures against tested bacterial strains, comparable to most relevant S. aureus over 48 hours. SEM pictures demonstrated uniform layers on coated sutures with higher roughness for palmitate coatings and sustaining integrity of coated sutures. Adherent S. aureus were found via SEM on all types of investigated sutures. The novel antimicrobial sutures showed significantly less viable adhered S. aureus bacteria (up to 6.1 log) compared to Vicryl(®) Plus (0.5 log). Within 11 μg/cm drug-containing sutures, octenidine-palmitate (OL11) showed the highest number of viable adhered S. aureus (0.5 log), similar to Vicryl(®) Plus. Chlorhexidine-laurate (CL11) showed the lowest number of S. aureus on sutures (1.7 log), a 1.2 log greater reduction. In addition, planktonic S. aureus in suspensions were highly inhibited by CL11 (0.9 log) represents a 0.6 log greater reduction compared to Vicryl(®) Plus (0.3 log). CONCLUSIONS: Novel antimicrobial sutures can potentially limit surgical site infections caused by multiple pathogenic bacterial species. Therefore, a potential inhibition of multispecies biofilm formation is assumed. In detail tested with S. aureus, the chlorhexidine-laurate coating (CL11) best meets the medical requirements for a fast bacterial eradication. This suture coating shows the lowest survival rate of adhering as well as planktonic bacteria, a high drug release during the first–clinically most relevant– 48 hours, as well as biocompatibility. Thus, CL11 coatings should be recommended for prophylactic antimicrobial sutures as an optimal surgical supplement to reduce wound infections. However, animal and clinical investigations are important to prove safety and efficacy for future applications.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5760023
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-57600232018-01-22 Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI) Obermeier, Andreas Schneider, Jochen Harrasser, Norbert Tübel, Jutta Mühlhofer, Heinrich Pförringer, Dominik von Deimling, Constantin Foehr, Peter Kiefel, Barbara Krämer, Christina Stemberger, Axel Schieker, Matthias Burgkart, Rainer von Eisenhart-Rothe, Rüdiger PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Surgical sutures can promote migration of bacteria and thus start infections. Antiseptic coating of sutures may inhibit proliferation of adhered bacteria and avoid such complications. OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the inhibition of viable adhering bacteria on novel antimicrobially coated surgical sutures using chlorhexidine or octenidine, a critical factor for proliferation at the onset of local infections. The medical need, a rapid eradication of bacteria in wounds, can be fulfilled by a high antimicrobial efficacy during the first days after wound closure. METHODS: As a pretesting on antibacterial efficacy against relevant bacterial pathogens a zone of inhibition assay was conducted with middle ranged concentrated suture coatings (22 μg/cm). For further investigation of adhering bacteria in detail the most clinically relevant Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC(®)49230™) was used. Absorbable braided sutures were coated with chlorhexidine-laurate, chlorhexidine-palmitate, octenidine-laurate, and octenidine-palmitate. Each coating type resulted in 11, 22, or 33 μg/cm drug content on sutures. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was performed once to inspect the coating quality and twice to investigate if bacteria have colonized on sutures. Adhesion experiments were assessed by exposing coated sutures to S. aureus suspensions for 3 h at 37°C. Subsequently, sutures were sonicated and the number of viable bacteria released from the suture surface was determined. Furthermore, the number of viable planktonic bacteria was measured in suspensions containing antimicrobial sutures. Commercially available sutures without drugs (Vicryl(®), PGA Resorba(®), and Gunze PGA), as well as triclosan-containing Vicryl(®) Plus were used as control groups. RESULTS: Zone of inhibition assay documented a multispecies efficacy of novel coated sutures against tested bacterial strains, comparable to most relevant S. aureus over 48 hours. SEM pictures demonstrated uniform layers on coated sutures with higher roughness for palmitate coatings and sustaining integrity of coated sutures. Adherent S. aureus were found via SEM on all types of investigated sutures. The novel antimicrobial sutures showed significantly less viable adhered S. aureus bacteria (up to 6.1 log) compared to Vicryl(®) Plus (0.5 log). Within 11 μg/cm drug-containing sutures, octenidine-palmitate (OL11) showed the highest number of viable adhered S. aureus (0.5 log), similar to Vicryl(®) Plus. Chlorhexidine-laurate (CL11) showed the lowest number of S. aureus on sutures (1.7 log), a 1.2 log greater reduction. In addition, planktonic S. aureus in suspensions were highly inhibited by CL11 (0.9 log) represents a 0.6 log greater reduction compared to Vicryl(®) Plus (0.3 log). CONCLUSIONS: Novel antimicrobial sutures can potentially limit surgical site infections caused by multiple pathogenic bacterial species. Therefore, a potential inhibition of multispecies biofilm formation is assumed. In detail tested with S. aureus, the chlorhexidine-laurate coating (CL11) best meets the medical requirements for a fast bacterial eradication. This suture coating shows the lowest survival rate of adhering as well as planktonic bacteria, a high drug release during the first–clinically most relevant– 48 hours, as well as biocompatibility. Thus, CL11 coatings should be recommended for prophylactic antimicrobial sutures as an optimal surgical supplement to reduce wound infections. However, animal and clinical investigations are important to prove safety and efficacy for future applications. Public Library of Science 2018-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5760023/ /pubmed/29315313 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190912 Text en © 2018 Obermeier et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Obermeier, Andreas
Schneider, Jochen
Harrasser, Norbert
Tübel, Jutta
Mühlhofer, Heinrich
Pförringer, Dominik
von Deimling, Constantin
Foehr, Peter
Kiefel, Barbara
Krämer, Christina
Stemberger, Axel
Schieker, Matthias
Burgkart, Rainer
von Eisenhart-Rothe, Rüdiger
Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI)
title Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI)
title_full Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI)
title_fullStr Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI)
title_full_unstemmed Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI)
title_short Viable adhered Staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (SSI)
title_sort viable adhered staphylococcus aureus highly reduced on novel antimicrobial sutures using chlorhexidine and octenidine to avoid surgical site infection (ssi)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5760023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29315313
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190912
work_keys_str_mv AT obermeierandreas viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT schneiderjochen viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT harrassernorbert viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT tubeljutta viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT muhlhoferheinrich viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT pforringerdominik viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT vondeimlingconstantin viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT foehrpeter viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT kiefelbarbara viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT kramerchristina viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT stembergeraxel viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT schiekermatthias viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT burgkartrainer viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi
AT voneisenhartrotherudiger viableadheredstaphylococcusaureushighlyreducedonnovelantimicrobialsuturesusingchlorhexidineandoctenidinetoavoidsurgicalsiteinfectionssi