| Literature DB >> 32046289 |
Nermin E Eleraky1, Ayat Allam1,2, Sahar B Hassan3, Mahmoud M Omar4,5.
Abstract
Based on the recent reports of World Health Organization, increaEntities:
Keywords: anti-biofilm mechanisms; antibacterial resistance; inhibition of antibacterial resistance; inorganic nanosystems; nanomedicine; organic nanosystems
Year: 2020 PMID: 32046289 PMCID: PMC7076477 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics12020142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Graphical outline of various classes of nanosystems with illustration of their possible anti-biofilm mechanisms.
Examples on recently published studies on different types of liposomes used against bacterial biofilm infections.
| Liposome Type | Lipid Composition | Anti-Bacterial Drug/Nutraceutical Agents | Size | Biofilm | Findings | Reference Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional Liposomes | DPPC (Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine) | Calcifediol (25 (OH)D) | 151.2 ± 0.3 nm |
|
Enhanced protection of liposomal 25(OH)D against Increasing effective solubility and stability of 25(OH)D after incorporation in liposome preparation. High stability of colloidal parameters pre- and post-nebulization. Effective targeting to the bronchial cells, where infection and inflammatory responses are mostly localized in CF patients. Higher bacterial killing property against Pseudomonas-infected human 16- HBE cells compared with both empty liposomes and 25(OH)D solution in ethanol. | 2017 [ |
| Conventional Liposomes | Egg yolk soybean L-α phosphatidyl choline |
Ampicillin Ofloxacin | 280 nm–1.76 µm | Ocular post-surgery infections |
Supercritical assisted liposome formation technique improved EE% (97%–99%) and used for production of more stable liposomes (up to 3 months). Further developments (in vitro/in vivo) will be needed to evaluate the anti-microbial effect of the proposed formulation. | 2018 [ |
| Conventional Liposomes | pH-sensitive lipids (PSLs):Phosphatidylcholine (PCS 100):Cholesterol (1:3:1 w/w/w) | Vancomycin | 99.38 ± 0.59–105.60 ± 5.38 nm | MRSA |
Successful synthesis of new biocompatible pH-sensitive lipids (PSLs). Improved targeted liposomal delivery of an antibiotic at the infection site. High encapsulation efficiency and loading capacity (29%–45% and 2.8%–4.5%, respectively). Structural changes in lipids at acidic pH caused the deformation of liposome structure and subsequent fast antibiotic release. Enhanced in vitro antimicrobial activities (low MIC values at pH 6.5). Better in vivo antibacterial activity (log10 cell forming unit CFU/mL of MRSA recovered from liposomal formulation in treated mice were 1.5- and 1.8-fold lower than that found in bare antibiotic treated ones. | 2018 [ |
|
Conventional liposomes Deformable liposomes. Propylene glycol liposomes. Cationic liposomes. | Lipoid | Azithromycin | 132–217 nm | MRSA |
Major effect of the composition of phospholipid and presence of surfactant or propylene glycol on the physical characteristics of the liposomes, the in vitro drug release profile, deposition inside the skin, as well as in vitro antibacterial efficacy. Better drug retaining of liposomal formulations inside the skin compared to control. Good biocompatibility of liposomal formulations with keratinocytes and fibroblasts. Efficient MRSA inhibition of liposomes, 32 folds lower MIC, superior to bare drug. | 2018 [ |
| Conventional Liposomes | Hydrogenated soy phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol (7:3 w/w) | Ciprofloxacin nanocrystals | ∼130 nm |
High encapsulation efficiency of the drug nanocrystals (71%–79%). Prolonged drug release from the liposomes. Delivering this formulation in the osmohaler lead to exceed the MIC (10 folds) over a 24-h period. | 2019 [ | |
| Conventional Liposomes | P90 G (Phospholipon 90 G), cholesterol |
Salvia triloba. Rosmarinus officinalis. | ∼200 nm |
|
Better enhancing of biopharmaceutical properties of essential oils by decreasing their volatility and improving their stability. High antibacterial activity compared to the unformulated essential oils. | 2019 [ |
| Conventional Liposomes | Phospholipon 90 G | Biosurfactants isolated from Lactobacillus gasseri Bc9 | <200 nm | MRSA |
Higher ability to eradicate Improved potential for local prevention of cutaneous infections. | 2019 [ |
| Conventional Liposomes | Egg yolk Lecithin | Cinnamaldehyde | 75–92.14 nm |
|
Long-term antibacterial activity and enhanced stability of cinnamaldehyde-loaded liposomes compared to unformulated one. | 2019 [ |
| Fusogenic Liposomes | Dope/Dppc/CHe MS (4:2:4 molar ratios) | Fusidic acid | 98.77–99 nm |
Enhanced cell membrane permeability. Better targeting ability of fusidic acid to infection sites. Superior antibacterial activity of liposomal preparation against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative strains compared to free fusidic acid that was active only against Gram-positive strains, The lowest MICs were obtained against | 2015 [ | |
| Surface-Modified Liposomes | PC: DSPE PEG: Chol: SA (6.5:0.5:2:1 mole %) | β-Lapachone | 88.7–112.4 nm | MRSA |
High drug encapsulation efficiency (97.4%–98.9%). Liposomal formulation did not interfere with drug antibacterial activity in addition to better improvement in its antifungal properties. Further in vivo studies should be done. | 2015 [ |
| Conventional liposomes | Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC)- cholesterol | Gentamicin | 126.25–140.26 nm |
|
Good encapsulation efficiency (17%). Sustained drug release over 16 h. Better protection of drug from degradation. Decreased risk of toxicity. Promising performance for wound dressing applications. | 2015 [ |
| Surface- Modified Liposomes | Phospholipid, cholesterol, tween 80, vitamin E (6:1:1.8:0.12 mass ratios). | Gallic acid | 153.2 ± 1.4 nm |
|
More favorable storage stability and higher antibacterial activity of lactoferrin gallic acid liposomes compared with Gallic acid liposomes. Improved the potential of lactoferrin liposomes as an effective delivery system for nutraceuticals in foods. | 2019 [ |
| Surface- Modified Liposomes | Phospholipids + Rhamnolipids (1:0, 10:1, 5:1, 2:1, 1:1 w/w). | Curcumin | 46.4–251 nm | - |
High loading efficiency (>90%) and loading capacity (3.5%). Good thermal and photochemical stability of curcumin after incorporation within liposomes. Prolonged sustained release of curcumin when rhamnolipids were incorporated. Further in vitro/in vivo studies against clinical strains are required. | 2019 [ |
| Surface-Modified Liposomes |
DPPC/CH/PG/PE (8:10:1:2 mol/mol) Wheat germ agglutinin cyclodextrins | Ciprofloxacin | ∼100 nm |
|
High encapsulation of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs achieved. Better attachment to oral cells and controlled co-drug release in saliva. Synergistic therapeutic activity in bacteria-infected oral cells up to 24 h. | 2020 [ |
| Liposomes-in-Hydrogel | Phospholipids (PC) | Isoniazide | ∼130 nm |
|
Successful formulation of a thermo-responsive and self-healing liposome-in-hydrogel system for localized treatment of bone TB. Prolonged in vitro/in vivo drug release behavior. High biocompatibility for in vivo applications. | 2019 [ |
| Reactive Liposomes Encapsulating Enzyme (s) | DPPC, cholesterol, hexadecylamine | Endolysins | 303 nm |
Salmonella Typhimurium E. coli |
High encapsulation efficiency of 22.81%–35.27%. Cationic liposomal preparation enhanced anti-bacterial activity of endolysins against Gm (-ve) organisms. | 2019 [ |
Examples on recent studies on lipid-based nanoparticles against bacterial infections.
| Lipid Composition | Drug | Size | Biofilm | Findings | Reference Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Compritol 888 ATO (a lipid excipient) | Vancomycin- Linoleic acid complex | 102.7 ± 1.01 |
Significant enhancement of drug encapsulation efficiency upon ion pairing with linoleic acid compared to free drug (70.73 ± 5.96% and 16.81 ± 3.64%), respectively. Superior antibacterial activity of complex loaded SLNs compared to free drug loaded SLNs against Superior antibacterial activity of complex loaded SLNs against MRSA (MIC= 15.62 µg/mL). | 2014 [ | |
| Compritol 888 ATO | Clotrimazole- silver complex | 124.1 ± 2.5 nm |
Controlled drug release in both complex and free drug loaded NPs, with slower release for free drug loaded NPs (22% compared to 97% after 72 h). Biosafety of the synthesized clotrimazole silver complex to mammalian cells (cell viability >80%). Superior antibacterial activity of clotrimazole complex compared to free drug (MIC = 9.76 and 31.25 µg/mL, respectively) against Clotrimazole SLNs completely lost its antibacterial activity after 36 h. Clotrimazole-silver SLNs had an MIC value of 52 µg/mL up to 54 h. | 2015 [ | |
| Glyceryl monostearate | Rifampin | 101 ± 4.7 nm |
|
High encapsulation efficiency (about 70%). SLN formulations were more effective in biomass reduction compared to the free form | 2016 [ |
| Stearic acid | Levofloxacin | 237.82 nm |
|
Box–Behnken design applied to optimize the formulation. High entrapment efficiency (78.71%). Enhanced flux across excised goat cornea. Biphasic pattern of drug release. Formulation of non-irritant and safe NPs for topical ophthalmic use. Comparable antibacterial activity against In vivo studies for levofloxacin-SLN should be carried out to determine its potential for ophthalmic delivery. | 2016 [ |
| Glyceryl behenate | Clarithromycin | 318–526 nm. |
|
High drug content in a range of 63%–89%. Burst drug release followed by extended drug release up to 48 h. The carbon chain length of lipid has a great impact on particle size, drug content and release rates of SLNs. SLN formulations rendered clarithromycin, 2 times more effective against its target (microdilution method). Antibacterial activity confirmed by comparative zones of inhibition around SLN (Solid lipid nanoparticles) formulations wells with clarithromycin zone. | 2019 [ |
| Glycerol monostearate | Furosemide-silver complex (Ag-FSE) | 129.8 ± 38.5 nm |
|
High encapsulation efficiency (∼93%) of complex loaded SLNs. Sustained drug release over 96 h. Improvement of antibacterial activity of complex loaded SLNs (2 and 4 folds) against | 2019 [ |
|
| |||||
| pH responsive NLC (Stearic acid and oleic acid) | Vancomycin | 225.2 ± 9.1 nm |
Improved antibacterial activity of drug loaded-NLCs against Better killing percentage of NLcs (2.5-fold) higher than the bare drug. High bactericidal activity in vivo (mouse model of MRSA skin infection) with 37-fold reduction in MRSA CFU (colony-forming unit) load of the skin treated with nanostructured lipid carriers (NLCs) compared to free vancomycin. | 2019 [ | |
| Cetyl palmitate and caprylic acid | Mupirocin | 99.8–235 nm | MRSA |
Improved antimicrobial activity against No signs of toxicity on albino rats. Improved pharmacokinetic parameters due to protection of the drug against enzymatic degradation. | 2019 [ |
| Stearic acid and oleic acid NLC with unmodified surface. NLC surface functionalized with a tuftsin-modifed peptide | Rifampicin |
NLC: 210 ± 8 nm Surface modified NLC: 285 ± 11 nm |
|
Significant internalization by macrophages obtained with surface modified NLc. Both surface-modified or unmodified NLC were 2-fold more effective against | 2019 [ |
Examples on recent studies on polymeric micelles against bacterial infections.
| Composition | Drug | Size | Biofilm | Findings | Reference Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cholesterol conjugated | Ciprofloxacin | 180 nm |
Streptococcus pneumoniae E. coli Neisseria meningitides |
Better uptake of micelles by human astrocytes due to the presence of TAT. Enhanced ability of micelles to cross the BBB and enter the brain for treatment of brain infections. | 2008 [ |
| Poly (lactic acid-co-glycolic acid)-block-poly (ethylene glycol)-alendronate copolymer | Vancomycin | 39.62–55.08 nm |
|
The conjugation of alendronate to the micelle surface did not affect drug loading capacity neither it’s in vitro release behaviors. Appropriate cytotoxicity. Enhanced bone targeted delivery of vancomycin to treat osteomyelitis. | 2015 [ |
| Mixed-shell-polymeric-micelles consisting of a hydrophilic | Triclosan | 160 nm |
|
Increased ability to target Presence of pH responsive moiety makes the particles acquire a positive charge under low pathological pH conditions facilitating binding with bacterial cell surfaces. Release of encapsulated drug occurs as a result of hydrolysis by bacterial lipases. | 2016 [ |
| Silver decorated amphiphilic diblock copolymers, poly (ε-caprolactone)-block-poly(aspartic acid) | Curcumin | 90–95 nm |
|
Synergistic antibacterial activities against both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacterial strains on contrary to either sliver micelle or curcumin-loaded micelle alone. Slow drug release rate in the absence of lipase, compared to about 95% release over 48 h when incubated with High biocompatibility with RBCs. | 2017 [ |
| Ethylene oxide-propylene oxide triblock copolymers, Pluronics® (P84, P85, P103, P105, P123 and F127) | Rifampicin and Isoniazid | - |
|
Controlled drugs release. Improved antibacterial activity of drugs loaded micelles against Enhanced drug permeability from micelles across Caco-2 monolayer compared to bare drugs. | 2018 [ |
| Amphiphilic poly (ethylene glycol)-poly( | Ciprofloxacin | 77 nm |
|
Enhanced blood circulation and bacterial targeting due to PEG shell and vancomycin. Improved release of encapsulated antibiotic at the infection site as a result of hydrolysis by bacterial lipase. High bactericidal activity in vivo ( Three doses of drug loaded micelles almost restored the normal alveolar microstructure. | 2018 [ |
| Fatty acid grafted chitosan conjugates nanomicelles | Ciprofloxacin | 260 nm |
|
High drug loading (about 19%). Enhanced MIC (4 and 2 times) was lower than the free drug against | 2018 [ |
| Carboxy methyl chitosan hydrophobically modified with stearic acid and conjugated with urea | Clarithromycin | 200 nm |
|
Better targeting to H. pylori due to the grafted ureido groups. High drug encapsulation efficiency (85.83 ± 0.98%). Prolonged drug release. In vitro inhibitory assay indicated a significant enhancement in anti- | 2019 [ |
| D-α-tocopherol polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate polymeric micelles | Baicalin | 14.05 ± 4.52 nm, |
|
In vivo study suggested the potential of baicalin loaded polymeric micelles to suppress the periodontal damage and alveolar bone loss compared to free drug. | 2019 [ |
Examples on recent studies on polymeric nanoparticles against bacterial infections.
| Type of Polymeric Nanoparticles | Drug | Size | Biofilm | Findings | Reference Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Chitosan | Ciprofloxacin Chlortetracycline HCL. |
|
Enhanced antibacterial activity of chitosan nanoparticles (NPs) loaded with antibiotics. Higher antibacterial activity against Gram-positive bacteria than Gram-negative bacteria. Order of inhibition is: Gentamycin sulfate ˃ ciprofloxacin HCL ˃ Chlortetracycline hydrochloride | 2015 [ | |
| pH-responsive chitosan coated iron oxide NPs | Ciprofloxacin | 30–80 nm | urinary tract and intestinal infections |
High drug loading efficiency (99%). Sustained drug release over 5 days. In vitro/in vivo antibacterial activity need to be evaluated. | 2016 [ |
| Genipin cross-linked chitosan/heparin NPs | Ciprofloxacin | 250 nm |
Improved drug loading efficiency (35.5 ± 2.5 to 45.5 ± 3.0%). Genipin crosslinking sustained drug release in acidic pH (16% after 2 h). Enhanced antibacterial activity compared to free drug (MIC equals 0.125 and 0.25 mg/mL, respectively). In vivo study needs to be evaluated. | 2016 [ | |
| Chitosan/fucoidan NPs | Gentamicin | 270–300 nm |
|
High drug encapsulation efficiency (91%–94%). Superior enhancement of antibacterial activity MIC of drug-loaded NPs was 1.95 µg/mL compared to >62.5 µg/mL for free drug. Enhanced bioavailability 1.8-fold increase in drug Cmax after its encapsulation in NPs. | 2016 [ |
| pH-responsive chitosan nanoparticles with new anionic gemini surfactant (AGS) | Vancomycin | 220.57 ± 5.9 nm | MRSA |
Improved encapsulation efficiency percent (59.89 ± 2.33%). Sustained drug release at acidic and normal physiological conditions. Enhanced antibacterial activity in vitro at pH 6.5 than pH 7.4 (MIC values, 7.81 and 62.5 µg/mL respectively). High in vivo anti MRSA activity (mice skin infected model) than free vancomycin (8 folds). | 2017 [ |
| Chitosan nanoparticles and fucoidan coated chitosan NPs | Ciprofloxacin | Chitosan NPs: 124 ± 7 nm. | Salmonella |
Low encapsulation efficiency and loading efficiency of the prepared NPs (10.6 ± 0.6% and 5.2 ± 0.4%, respectively). Sustained drug release over 2 weeks. Coating with fucoidan enhanced drug delivery within macrophages. Superior antibacterial activity of fucoidan coated NPs in vivo ( | 2017 [ |
| Chitosan-Dextran sulphate NPs | Ciprofloxacin | 350 nm | Gm +ve and Gm -ve ophthalmic microorganisms. |
High drug encapsulation efficiency (83%/wt). Monotonous controlled release for 21 h. Powerful antibacterial activity of Cipro-NPs than the bare ciprofloxacin. Ocular irritancy test revealed that the prepared nanoparticles were non-irritant. | 2017 [ |
| Alginate lyase functionalized chitosan NPs | Ciprofloxacin | 205.5 ± 9.0 nm |
|
Improved encapsulation efficiency percent (51.8 ± 2.1%). Sustained drug release. Prolonged MIC and MBEC (minimal biofilm eradication concentration) (0.125 µg/mL and 0.5 µg/mL after 24 h), respectively. Significant reduction in biofilm aggregation. Safe preparation on the lung of rats. Further in vivo assessment on infected animals is required. | 2019 [ |
|
| |||||
| PLGA functionalized with DNase I | Ciprofloxacin | 251.9 nm |
|
Controlled drug release Successful targeting and destroying of the biofilm by degrading the extracellular DNA. Successful reduction of biofilm mass, size and living cell density. Minimal cytotoxicity. Complete eradication (99.8%) of established biofilm upon repeated nanoparticle administration over three days. Considered as novel antimicrobial nanoparticles to treat persistent bacterial infections | 2015 [ |
| PLGA | Amikacin | 447 ± 7 |
|
High encapsulation efficiency percent (76.8 ± 3.8%). No toxicity against RAW macrophages until 24 h of exposure. Reduced antibacterial activity of NPs against planktonic cells (MIC:16 μg/mL and MBC: 32 μg/mL) compared to free drug (MIC: 4 μg/mL and MBC: 8 μg/mL), due to gradual drug release from NPs. Reduced Antibacterial activity of NPs against biofilm (MBEC: 512 μg/mL) versus the free amikacin (MBEC 128 μg/mL). | 2016 [ |
| PLGA | Ciprofloxacin-SDS complex (ciprofloxacin complex loaded PLGA) | 190.4 ± 28.6 nm |
|
High encapsulation efficiency percent (79%). The complex-loaded NPs were non-toxic at concentrations >>MICcipro against bacterial strains. Enhanced antibacterial activity of the complex NPs relative to free drug (zone of inhibition 36.0 ± 0.8 and 32.0 ± 0.5 mm, respectively). | 2017 [ |
| PLGA (poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) | Gentamicin | 227 nm |
|
Drug encapsulation efficiency (135 μg/mg PLGA). Reduced anti-microbial activity of drug loaded nanoparticles relative to free drug (MIC = 10.94 and 1.09 and μg/mL, respectively). Enhanced anti-microbial activity of drug loaded NPs were observed over 120 h incubation (MBC = 5.47 μg/mL). In vivo study using Galleria mellonella larvae model showed that the nanoparticle formulation was as effective as the free drug in vivo. | 2018 [ |
| PLGA and PEG-PLGA di-block NPs | Tobramycin | NPs: 225–231 nm |
Low encapsulation efficiency (about 3%). Powerful bactericidal activity compared to free drug (less than 0.77 mg/L encapsulated drug required to kill bacteria in the biofilm, whereas 1000 mg/L of free drug needed. No cytotoxicity was detected in vitro in human lung epithelial cells. | 2018 [ | |
| Polyethylenimine/diazeniumdiolate (PEI/NONOate)-doped PLGA nanoparticles | Nitric oxide (NO) | 240 ± 20 | MRSA |
The amount of drug loaded in NPs (122 ± 1 μmole/g NPs). Extended NO release over 4 days in simulated wound fluid. High MIC (0.625 mg/mL). High cell viability over 80% after NPs treatment indicating absence of toxicity to mammalian fibroblast cells (L929) compared to commercially available topical antiseptics. Superior wound healing activities in diabetic ICR (Institute of Cancer Research) mice and in Balb/c mice (an albino, laboratory-bred strain) (>90% wound closure 12 days’ post injury). | 2019 [ |
| Alginate modified-PLGA nanoparticles | Amikacin and moxifloxacin | Alginate coated PLGA NPs: 640 ± 32 nm |
Enhanced anti-mycobacterial activity of the dually entrapped drug-loaded particles (bacterial viability was 0.6%, compared to 6.49% for amikacin NPs and 3.27% for moxifloxacin NPs). Further in vivo evaluation should be done. | 2019 [ | |
Figure 2Diagrammatic illustration of the novel approaches utilized for combating antibacterial resistance.
Nanosystem-based antibiotics and anti-toxins in clinical trials different stages.
| Antibiotic | Clinical Trial | Medical Condition/Indication | Trial Phase | Intervention Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ciprofloxacin | Inhaled ciprofloxacin loaded-liposome: Once a day management of respiratory infections [ |
| Phase 1 | Ciprofloxacin |
| Ciprofloxacin | Inhaled ciprofloxacin loaded-liposome: Once a day management of respiratory infections [ |
| Phase 2a | Ciprofloxacin |
| Ciprofloxacin | Inhaled ciprofloxacin loaded-liposome in patients with non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis and chronic lung infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ORBIT-3 and ORBIT-4): two phase 3, randomised controlled trials [ | Bronchiectasis and Chronic | Phase 3 | Inhaled Liposomal Ciprofloxacin |
| Ciprofloxacin | Phase 3 Study with Ciprofloxacin Dispersion for Inhalation in Non-Cystic Fibrosis Bronchiectasis (ORBIT-3) [ | Non-Cystic Fibrosis Bronchiectasis | Phase 3 | Ciprofloxacin dispersion for inhalation (Liquid mixture of liposomally encapsulated and un encapsulated ciprofloxacin) |
| Amikacin | Liposomal Amikacin for Inhalation (LAI) for Nontuberculous Mycobacteria [ | Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous | Phase 2 | Liposomal amikacin for inhalation (LAI) |
| Amikacin | Extension Study of Liposomal Amikacin for Inhalation in Cystic Fibrosis (CF) Patients with Chronic Pseudomonas Aeruginosa (Pa) Infection [ | Cystic Fibrosis Patients with Chronic | Phase 3 | Amikacin |
| Amikacin | Inhaled amikacin loaded-liposome for treating Mycobacterium Abscesses Lung Disease [ | Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous | Phase 2 | Liposomal amikacin for inhalation (LAI) plus multi-drug regimen |
| Amikacin | Study to Evaluate Efficacy of inhaled amikacin loaded-liposome combined with multi-drug regimen, Compared to Multi-drug Regimen Alone (CONVERT) [ | Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous | Phase 3 | Liposomal Amikacin for Inhalation, 590 mg |
| Amikacin | Study of Dose Escalation of Liposomal Amikacin for Inhalation (ARIKAYCE™)-Extension Phase [ | Cystic Fibrosis | Phase 2 | Drug: Arikayce™ |
| Biological: CAL02 | CAL02; a liposomal adjunctive anti-toxin therapy in infections. A new therapeutic approach for severe community-acquired pneumonia [ | Severe community-acquired pneumonia | Phase 2 and 3 | CAL02 anti-toxin |
| Biological: GS-CDA1 | Study of the Clinical Effectiveness of a Human Monoclonal Antibody to C. Difficile Toxin A and Toxin B in Patients with Clostridium Difficile Associated Disease [ | Phase 2 | Biological: (GS-CDA1) |
Nanosystem-based antimicrobial peptides in clinical trials different stages.
| Antimicrobial Peptides | Medical Condition/Indication | Clinical Trial Phase | Antimicrobial Peptides Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mutacin 1140 (MU1140) [ | Gm +ve bacteria (MRSA, | Preclinical |
|
| lipohexapeptides 1345 (HB1345) [ | Broad-spectrum antibiotic, acne | Preclinical | Lipopeptide |
| Novarifyn (NP432) [ | MRSA, | Preclinical | Synthetic antimicrobial |
| Arenicin (AP139) [ | Gm−ve bacteria, UTI | Preclinical | Lugworm Arenicol marina |
| Arenicin (AP138) [ | MRSA implant infections | Preclinical | Arenicin analog |
| Arenicin (AP114) [ |
| Preclinical | Arenicin analog |
| Avidocin and purocin [ | Gm+ve and Gm−ve bacteria | Preclinical | Modified R-type bacteriocin |
| Novacta biosystems (NVB-302) [ |
| Phase 1 | Lantibiotic |
| Human lactoferrin (hlf1-11) [ | Infection following transplantation | Phase 1 and phase 2 | Lactoferricin analog |
| (a potent cyclic lipodepsipeptides antibiotic) Wap-8294A2 [ | Gm+ve bacteria (VRE and MRSA) | Phase 1 and phase 2 | Lysobactor spp. |
| The specifically targeted antimicrobial peptide (C16G2) [ | Prevention of tooth decay caused by Streptococcus mutans | Phase 2 | Synthetic peptide |
| Antimicrobial Peptide (DPK-060) [ | Acute external otitis | Phase 2 | Human protein kininogen |
| LTX-109 (Lytixar) [ | Nasal decolonization of MRSA | Phase 1 & 2 | Synthetic peptidomimetic |
| p2TA (AB 103) [ | Necrotizing soft tissue infections | Phase 3 | Synthetic peptide |
| Surotomycin [ | Phase 3 | Cyclic lipopeptide | |
| Ramoplanin (NTI-851) [ |
| Phase 2 | Actinoplanes spp |
Figure 3Graphical representation of the challenges in the clinical translation of nanomedicine.