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Novel Antimicrobial Strategies to Prevent Biofilm Infections in Catheters after Radical Cystectomy: A Pilot Study

Authors :
Rosa Gaglione
Katia Pane
Maria De Luca
Monica Franzese
Angela Arciello
Francesco Trama
Stefano Brancorsini
Marco Salvatore
Ester Illiano
Elisabetta Costantini
Gaglione, Rosa
Pane, Katia
De Luca, Maria
Franzese, Monica
Arciello, Angela
Trama, Francesco
Brancorsini, Stefano
Salvatore, Marco
Illiano, Ester
Costantini, Elisabetta
Source :
Life; Volume 12; Issue 6; Pages: 802
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Catheter-associated infections in bladder cancer patients, following radical cystectomy or ureterocutaneostomy, are very frequent, and the development of antibiotic resistance poses great challenges for treating biofilm-based infections. Here, we characterized bacterial communities from catheters of patients who had undergone radical cystectomy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer. We evaluated the efficacy of conventional antibiotics, alone or combined with the human ApoB-derived antimicrobial peptide r(P)ApoBLAla, to treat ureteral catheter-colonizing bacterial communities on clinically isolated bacteria. Microbial communities adhering to indwelling catheters were collected during the patients’ regular catheter change schedules (28 days) and extracted within 48 h. Living bacteria were characterized using selective media and biochemical assays. Biofilm growth and novel antimicrobial strategies were analyzed using confocal laser scanning microscopy. Statistical analyses confirmed the relevance of the biofilm reduction induced by conventional antibiotics (fosfomycin, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, gentamicin, and tetracycline) and a well-characterized human antimicrobial peptide r(P)ApoBLAla (1:20 ratio, respectively). Catheters showed polymicrobial communities, with Enterobactericiae and Proteus isolates predominating. In all samples, we recorded a meaningful reduction in biofilms, in both biomass and thickness, upon treatment with the antimicrobial peptide r(P)ApoBLAla in combination with low concentrations of conventional antibiotics. The results suggest that combinations of conventional antibiotics and human antimicrobial peptides might synergistically counteract biofilm growth on ureteral catheters, suggesting novel avenues for preventing catheter-associated infections in patients who have undergone radical cystectomy and ureterocutaneostomy.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Life; Volume 12; Issue 6; Pages: 802
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....299e0d8874a0b1891c77534a4164edb9