A potent antibiotic-loaded bone-cement implant against staphylococcal bone infections.
Sumana GhoshMau SinhaRitwik SamantaSuresh SadhasivamAnamika BhattacharyyaAshis NandySwamini SainiNupur TandonHimanshi SinghSwati GuptaAnjali ChauhanKeerthi Kumar AavulaSneha Susan VarghesePujie ShiSudip GhoshMukesh Kumar GargTanmoy SahaAparna PadhyeShamik GhoshHae Lin JangShiladitya SenguptaPublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2022)
New antibiotics should ideally exhibit activity against drug-resistant bacteria, delay the development of bacterial resistance to them and be suitable for local delivery at desired sites of infection. Here, we report the rational design, via molecular-docking simulations, of a library of 17 candidate antibiotics against bone infection by wild-type and mutated bacterial targets. We screened this library for activity against multidrug-resistant clinical isolates and identified an antibiotic that exhibits potent activity against resistant strains and the formation of biofilms, decreases the chances of bacterial resistance and is compatible with local delivery via a bone-cement matrix. The antibiotic-loaded bone cement exhibited greater efficacy than currently used antibiotic-loaded bone cements against staphylococcal bone infections in rats. Potent and locally delivered antibiotic-eluting polymers may help address antimicrobial resistance.