| Literature DB >> 34927024 |
Rita Teixeira-Santos1, Marta Lima1, Luciana C Gomes1, Filipe J Mergulhão1.
Abstract
Despite the advancements in material science and surgical techniques, the incidence of implant-associated infections (IAIs) has increased significantly. IAIs are mainly caused by microbial adhesion and biofilm formation on implant surfaces. In this study, we aimed to evaluate and critically discuss the antimicrobial efficacy of chitosan-based coatings to prevent the occurrence of IAIs. For this purpose, a PRISMA-oriented systematic review was conducted based on predefined criteria and forty studies were selected for qualitative analysis. Results indicated that chitosan (CS) association with enzymes and antimicrobial peptides improves its antimicrobial activity and extends its use in a broad range of physiological conditions. Likewise, CS association with polymers resulted in enhanced antimicrobial and anti-adhesive coatings with desirable properties, such as biocompatibility and durability, for implantable medical devices (IMDs). These findings can assist researchers in the design of new CS coatings for application in IMDs.Entities:
Keywords: Materials science; Microbiofilms
Year: 2021 PMID: 34927024 PMCID: PMC8652012 DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.103480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: iScience ISSN: 2589-0042
Figure 1Chitosan origin
Schematic representation of the chitin sources, and the chemical structure of chitin and its derivate chitosan.
Figure 2Antibacterial activity of chitosan
Schematic representation of possible antibacterial mechanisms of chitosan and its derivatives: cell wall charge disruption, metal chelation, and cytoplasmic DNA complexation.
Figure 3PRISMA flow chart
Summary of the literature search based on the PRISMA flow chart (Moher et al., 2009).
Figure 4Yearly published studies on chitosan coatings for medical devices
Number of published studies addressing the antimicrobial and anti-adhesive properties of chitosan coatings with application in implantable medical devices, by year.
Studies demonstrating the efficacy of antimicrobial coatings based on non-functionalized and functionalized chitosans
| Coating | Material | Medical application | Species | Major conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan | Polyethylene catheters | Central venous catheters and other medical devices | ( | ||
| Polystyrene microtiter plates | Indwelling medical devices | ( | |||
| Silicone | Implantable devices or biosensors | Results demonstrated that | ( | ||
| ND | Indwelling medical devices | Chitosan (0.0625 mg/mL) induced a biofilm reduction of 86.5%. | ( | ||
| Glass | Indwelling medical devices | Results demonstrated that 0.0313% CS killed more than 50% of cells in the early and intermediate phases of biofilm development. | ( | ||
| Polyurethane films | Indwelling medical devices | Chitosan (0.5%)-coated films reduced | ( | ||
| Polystyrene films | Indwelling medical devices | ( | |||
| Foley urinary catheter segments | Urinary catheters | High and low molecular weight CS reduced bacterial adhesion by 70% and 58%, respectively. A low percentage of viable | ( | ||
| Foley urinary catheter segments | Urinary catheters | After 48 h, CS-coated catheters were able to reduce | ( | ||
| Silicone catheters segments | Urinary catheters | CS-coated catheters inhibited | ( | ||
| Low molecular weight CS | Polyurethane-like catheters segments | Central venous catheters | Chitosan (78 mg/mL) reduced the biofilm metabolic activity of | ( | |
| Polyurethane catheter segments | Central venous catheters | The metabolic activity and total biomass of | ( | ||
| Carboxymethyl chitosan | Silicone pre-treated with polydopamine | Medical devices | Carboxymethyl CS coating reduced | ( | |
| Silicone films | Indwelling medical devices | ( | |||
| Medical-grade silicone | Voice prosthesis | Carboxymethyl chitosan-coated films displayed a surface coverage of 4% less than untreated films. | ( | ||
| Medical-grade silicone | Voice prosthesis | Carboxymethyl CS inhibited the adhesion of fungi and bacteria with an efficiency greater than 90%. CS coatings inhibited mixed biofilm formation by 73% and decreased their metabolic activity by more than 60%. | ( | ||
| Medical-grade silicone | Indwelling medical devices | After 90 min, more than 90% of cells were unable to adhere to carboxymethyl CS (2.5 mg/mL)-coated surfaces. Coated silicone films also inhibited | ( | ||
| Quaternised chitosan derivative | Polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA)-based cement | Orthopedic implants | MRSA | The viability of biofilms formed on functionalized-CS-PMMA surfaces was significantly lower than on PMMA surfaces ( | ( |
| Fatty acid derivatives | Poly(ethylene terephthalate) and butylene dilinoleate (50:50) polymer | Catheters | ( | ||
| Cathechol | Polyurethane films | Urethral catheter | During the initial adhesion, the number of live | ( | |
MRSA, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
n.d., not described.
in vivo study.
in vitro study.
study performed under hydrodynamic conditions.
dip coating.
non-immobilized CS.
Candida sp.
Cryptococcus sp.
Staphylococcus sp.
Klebsiella sp.
Pseudomonas sp.
Acinetobacter sp.
Escherichia sp.
Proteus sp.
Lactobacillus sp.
Rothia sp.
Streptococcus sp.
Figure 5Antimicrobial activity of modified chitosan
Antimicrobial effect of coatings based on (A) functionalized CS and CS in association of (B) antimicrobial compounds, (C) metals, and (D) polymers.
Studies describing the efficacy of antimicrobial coatings based on chitosans associated with compounds displaying antimicrobial activity
| CS-based coatings | Material | Medical application | Species | Major conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rifampicin | CS films | Long-term medical devices | Bacterial cells were not able to grow on CS-rifampicin surfaces after 72 h incubation. | ( | |
| pH-responsive tobramycin-embedded micelles | Polydopamine-modified titanium surfaces | Orthopedic implants | Adhered bacteria were significantly lower ( | ( | |
| Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (CoAM) | Silicone | Tympanostomy tubes | CS-CoAM-coated silicone films exhibited a high efficacy (> 93%) in the prevention of biofilm formation on the tube surface. | ( | |
| Hyaloronic acid (HA)/triclosan | Modified titanium surfaces | Medical implants | Bacteria adhered to CS-HA surfaces lost their viability by 72%, while bacteria attached to the CS-HA/triclosan-coated surface showed a total loss in viability. | ( | |
| Lysozyme | Stainless steel surfaces | Medical implants and devices | ( | ||
| Proteases | ND | Indwelling medical devices | The antibiofilm activity of proteases was observed after 24 h of incubation; bead mobility was increased with Protease B (36%), Alcalase (57%), and Neutrase (84%). | ( | |
| Cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) and deoxyribonuclease I (DNase) | Polystyrene microtiter plates | Indwelling medical devices | Biofilms of | ( | |
| Hyaluronic acid (HA)/β-peptide (coumarin-linker-(ACHC-B3hVal-B3hLys)3 | Polyethylene catheters | Central venous catheters | ( | ||
| Titanium surfaces | Orthopedic implants | Results demonstrated that coatings loaded with β-peptide prevented the formation of | ( | ||
| α-helical AMP MSI-78(4-20) (KFLKKAKKFGKAFVKIL) | Gold substrates | Bone implants and other medical devices | The AMP-chitosan coating did not significantly reduce bacterial adhesion but decreased the viability of adhered cells by 60%. | ( | |
n.d., not described.
in vivo study.
in vitro study.
study performed under hydrodynamic conditions.
dip coating.
layer-by-layer assembly.
Staphylococcus sp.
Escherichia sp.
Listeria sp.
Pseudomonas sp.
Candida sp.
Studies describing the efficacy of antimicrobial coatings based on chitosans associated with silver and ceramics.
| CS-based coatings | Material | Medical application | Species | Major conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs)/polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) | Silicone wafers and polyethylene sheets | Medical devices | Chitosan-AgNPs/PVP composites displayed higher antimicrobial activity than polyethylene films (inhibition zone 4 mm vs. 0 mm, respectively). In addition, these films reduced | ( | |
| Catechol/Silver nanoparticles | Polyurethane films | Urethral catheters | During the initial adhesion, live | ( | |
| Zinc oxide/polyaniline (ZnO/PANI) composite | Glass | Indwelling medical devices | CS-ZnO/PANI coatings inhibited | ( | |
| Iron oxide nanoparticles | Polystyrene microtiter plates | Orthopedic implants | CS-coated iron oxide nanoparticles decreased the number of biofilm cells up to 3 Log and its metabolic activity by 50% compared to the control. | ( | |
| Apatite | Titanium surfaces | Orthopedic implants | Apatite-CS films reduced biofilms viability by 1 and 2 Log for | ( |
in vitro study.
study performed under hydrodynamic conditions.
dip coating.
non-immobilized CS.
Escherichia sp.
Staphylococcus sp.
Candida sp.
Pseudomonas sp.
Studies demonstrating the efficacy of antimicrobial coatings based on chitosans associated with polymers.
| CS-based coatings | Material | Medical application | Species | Major conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low molecular weight chitosan hydrogel | Polystyrene plates | Central venous catheters | ( | ||
| Poly(lactic-co-glycolic) acid | n.d. | Medical prosthetic devices | Biofilms formed on CS-nanocoated surfaces contain at least 2-fold less viable cells compared to uncoated surfaces. | ( | |
| Hyaloronic acid (HA) | Polyethylene catheters | Central venous catheters | ( | ||
| Modified titanium surfaces | Medical implants | Bacteria adhered to CS-HA surface lost their viability by 72%. | ( | ||
| Alginate (anionic polysaccharide) | Silicone | Central venous catheters | CS-based coating fully inhibited bacterial growth. | ( |
n.d., not described.
in vivo study.
in vitro study.
study performed under hydrodynamic conditions.
dip coating.
non-immobilized CS.
Candida sp.
Staphylococcus sp.