Systemic rifampicin shows accretion to locally implanted hydroxyapatite particles in a rat abdominal muscle pouch model
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Published:2023-01-09
Issue:1
Volume:8
Page:19-28
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ISSN:2206-3552
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Container-title:Journal of Bone and Joint Infection
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J. Bone Joint Infect.
Author:
Sebastian SujeeshORCID, Huang Jintian, Liu Yang, Collin MattiasORCID, Tägil Magnus, Raina Deepak BushanORCID, Lidgren Lars
Abstract
Abstract. Introduction: biomaterials combined with antibiotics are routinely used for
the management of bone infections. After eluting high concentrations of
antibiotics during the first week, sub-inhibitory concentrations of
antibiotics may lead to late repopulation of recalcitrant bacteria. Recent
studies have shown that systemically given antibiotics like tetracycline and
rifampicin (RIF) could seek and bind to locally implanted hydroxyapatite
(HA). The aim of this in vivo study was to test if systemically administered
rifampicin could replenish HA-based biomaterials with or without prior
antibiotic loading to protect the material from late bacterial repopulation.
Methods: in vivo accretion of systemically administered RIF to three
different types of HA-based materials was tested. In group 1, nano (n)- and
micro (m)-sized HA particles were used, while group 2 consisted of a calcium
sulfate/hydroxyapatite (CaS/HA) biomaterial without preloaded antibiotics
gentamycin (GEN) or vancomycin (VAN), and in group 3, the CaS/HA material
contained GEN (CaS/HA+GEN) or VAN (CaS/HA+VAN). The above materials were
implanted in an abdominal muscle pouch model in rats, and at 7 d
post-surgery, the animals were assigned to a control group (i.e., no systemic
antibiotic) and a test group (i.e., animals receiving one single
intraperitoneal injection of RIF each day (4 mg per rat) for 3 consecutive
days). Twenty-four hours after the third injection, the animals were
sacrificed and the implanted pellets were retrieved and tested against
Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923 in an agar diffusion assay. After overnight incubation, the zone
of inhibition (ZOI) around the pellets were measured.
Results: in the control group, 2/6 CaS/HA+GEN pellets had a ZOI, while all
other harvested pellets had no ZOI. No pellets from animals in test group 1
had a ZOI. In test group 2, 10/10 CaS/HA pellets showed a ZOI. In test group
3, 5/6 CaS/HA+GEN and 4/6 CaS/HA+VAN pellets showed a ZOI.
Conclusions: in this proof-of-concept study, we have shown that a locally
implanted biphasic CaS/HA carrier after 1 week can be loaded by systemic
RIF administration and exert an antibacterial effect. Further in vivo
infection models are necessary to validate our findings.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery
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