| Literature DB >> 34054768 |
Ewa Klara Stuermer1, Isabell Plattfaut2, Michael Dietrich2, Florian Brill3, Andreas Kampe3, Vanessa Wiencke3, Anna Ulatowski3, Maria Geffken4, Julian-Dario Rembe5, Ella Alexandrovna Naumova6, Sebastian Eike Debus1, Ralf Smeets7,8.
Abstract
The treatment of acute and chronic infected wounds with residing biofilm still poses a major challenge in medical care. Interactions of antimicrobial dressings with bacterial load, biofilm matrix and the overall protein-rich wound microenvironment remain insufficiently studied. This analysis aimed to extend the investigation on the efficacy of a variety of antimicrobial dressings using an in vitro biofilm model (lhBIOM) mimicking the specific biofilm-environment in human wounds. Four wound dressings containing polyhexanide (PHMB), octendine di-hydrochloride (OCT), cadexomer-iodine (C-IOD) or ionic silver (AG) were compared regarding their antimicrobial efficacy. Quantitative analysis was performed using a quantitative suspension method, separately assessing remaining microbial counts within the solid biofilm as well as the dressing eluate (representing the absorbed wound exudate). Dressing performance was tested against P. aeruginosa biofilms over the course of 6 days. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to obtain qualitative visualization on changes in biofilm structure. C-IOD demonstrated superior bacterial reduction. In comparison it was the only dressing achieving a significant reduction of more than 7 log10 steps within 3 days. Neither the OCT- nor the AG-containing dressing exerted a distinct and sustained antimicrobial effect. PHMB achieved a non-significant microbicidal effect (1.71 ± 0.31 log10 steps) at day 1. Over the remaining course (6 days) it demonstrated a significant microbistatic effect compared to OCT, AG and the control. Quantitative results in the dressing eluate correlate with those of the solid biofilm model. Overall, AG- and OCT-containing dressings did not achieve the expected anti-biofilm efficacy, while C-IOD performed best. Chemical interaction with the biofilms extrapolymeric substance (EPS), visualized in the SEM, and dressing configuration (agent concentration and release pattern) are suspected to be responsible. The unexpected low and diverse results of the tested antimicrobial dressings indicate a necessity to rethink non-debridement anti-biofilm therapy. Focussing on the combination of biofilm-disruptive (for EPS structure) and antimicrobial (for residing microorganisms) features, as with C-IOD, using dehydration and iodine, appears reasonably complementary and an optimal solution, as suggested by the here presented in vitro data.Entities:
Keywords: PHMB; antimicrobials; iodine; octenidine dihydrochloride; silver; wound biofilm; wound dressing; wound infection
Year: 2021 PMID: 34054768 PMCID: PMC8160304 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.664030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Investigated dressings.
| UrgoClean® | Urgo GmbH, Chenôve, France | Cohesive polyabsorbent polyacrylate fibers; TLC wound matrix®; non-adhesive | None |
| Sorelex® | Contipro C, Dolní Dobrouč, Czech Republic | Permeable, gel-forming bioactive gauze, releases octenidine hydrochloride, and sodium hyluronat; non-adhesive | Octenidine di-hydrochloride (not indicated) |
| Suprasorb® P + PHMB | Lohmann&Rauscher GmbH, Rengsdorf, Germany; Vienna, Austria | Semi permeable top film on polyurethane foam layer impregnated with and releasing PHMB; non-adhesive | Polyhexanide (0.25–0.65 mg/cm2) |
| UrgoClean® Ag | Urgo GmbH, Chenôve, France | Cohesive polyabsorbent polyacrylate fibers; TLC wound matrix®; silver ion coating; non-adhesive | Ionic silver (0.50 mg/cm2) |
| IODOSORBTM Dressing | Smith & Nephew GmbH, Hull, England | Beats of cadexomer (dextrin and epichlorhydrin) on gauze backing release iodine; non-adhesive | Iodine (0.90% w/w) |
FIGURE 1Immunohistochemical carbohydrates-staining of the glycocalyx of 24 h maturated biofilm produced by P. aeruginosa. Carbohydrates were detected with FITC-conjugated Con A, cellular and bacterial nucleic acids with SYTO Red staining (scale bar: 100 μm).
FIGURE 2Comparison of the antimicrobial efficacy of wound dressings containing antimicrobial agents in the P. aerugionosa biofilm model lhBIOM. Reduction rates of bacteria (in log10 cfu/mL) are outlined after 1, 3, and 6 days of treatment with agent-free wound dressings (CTRL) and dressings containing octenidine (OCT), polyhexanide (PHMB), cadexomer-iodine (C-IOD), or ionic silver (AG). Bacterial content of the biofilm (solid bars) and in the dressing eluate (striped bars) are shown (values expressed as mean ± SEM. *p ≤ 0.05 vs. CTRL; **p ≤ 0.01 vs. CTRL, ***p ≤ 0.001 vs. CTRL, and ****p ≤ 0.0001 vs. CTRL).
FIGURE 3Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) visualization of P. aerugionosa biofilm surface (lhBIOM) after 3 days under control conditions (A) and after treatment with commercial wound dressings: (B) polyurethane dressing with no active agent; (C) with octenidin (OCT); (D) with polyhexanide (PHMB); (E) with cadexomer-iodine (C-IOD) and (F) ionic silver. The untreated biofilm model (A) shows a densely connected surface structure. After treatment with cadexomer-iodine (E), surface structure appears rugged and “broken-open” with several holes as potential new entry points for iodine. After treatment with OCT (C) and PHMB (D) biofilm surface remains more dense though several holes are visible. Silver (F) induced the least changes.