- Main
Point-of-care antimicrobial coating protects orthopaedic implants from bacterial challenge
- Xi, Weixian;
- Hegde, Vishal;
- Zoller, Stephen D;
- Park, Howard Y;
- Hart, Christopher M;
- Kondo, Takeru;
- Hamad, Christopher D;
- Hu, Yan;
- Loftin, Amanda H;
- Johansen, Daniel O;
- Burke, Zachary;
- Clarkson, Samuel;
- Ishmael, Chad;
- Hori, Kellyn;
- Mamouei, Zeinab;
- Okawa, Hiroko;
- Nishimura, Ichiro;
- Bernthal, Nicholas M;
- Segura, Tatiana
Abstract
Implant related infections are the most common cause of joint arthroplasty failure, requiring revision surgeries and a new implant, resulting in a cost of $8.6 billion annually. To address this problem, we created a class of coating technology that is applied in the operating room, in a procedure that takes less than 10 min, and can incorporate any desired antibiotic. Our coating technology uses an in situ coupling reaction of branched poly(ethylene glycol) and poly(allyl mercaptan) (PEG-PAM) polymers to generate an amphiphilic polymeric coating. We show in vivo efficacy in preventing implant infection in both post-arthroplasty infection and post-spinal surgery infection mouse models. Our technology displays efficacy with or without systemic antibiotics, the standard of care. Our coating technology is applied in a clinically relevant time frame, does not require modification of implant manufacturing process, and does not change the implant shelf life.
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