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Antibacterial activity of antibiotic coated silicone grafts
Authors:H Li  MR Fairfax  F Dubocq  RO Darouiche  A Rajpurkar  M Thompson  MV Tefilli  CB Dhabuwala
Affiliation:Department of Urology, Wayne State University, School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201, USA.
Abstract:PURPOSE: Postoperative infection remains one of the most serious complications of implantation of penile prostheses. Attempts to reduce the rate of infection by spraying the prosthesis with an antibiotic solution prior to implantation, along with perioperative antibiotics, have failed to eradicate infection. No published studies have evaluated the effect of antibiotic coating of penile prostheses. In this study, we evaluate the antibacterial effect of antibiotic-coated silicone strips as a surrogate for the penile prosthesis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Strips coated with several different antibiotics were dipped in bacterial solutions containing Staphylococcus epidermidis or S. aureus and implanted subcutaneously in adult Sprague-Dawley rats. After a week, the strips were removed, and the number of bacteria on the strips and in the surrounding tissue were determined. The in vitro antibiotic activity of the antibiotic-coated strips against the same organisms was also determined. RESULTS: In the group of rats that received silicone strips contaminated in vitro with S. epidermidis, six of nine control rats yielded strips and tissues containing heavy bacterial growth. None of six strips coated with rifampin/minocycline yielded bacterial growth, nor did any of the seven strips coated with vancomycin. One of seven rats that received amikacin-coated strips had infection of the strip. The tissue results were similar to the strip results. In the group using S. aureus as the contaminating bacterium, the strips and tissues from eight of nine control rats yielded bacteria. None of the six rifampin/minocycline-coated strips yielded bacteria, while two of seven vancomycin-treated strips and two of six amikacin-coated strips were infected with S. aureus. The difference in bacterial growth between controls and antibiotic-coated strips reached a level of statistical significance for the rifampin/minocycline and vancomycin groups and was highly significant for the rifampin/minocycline groups. CONCLUSION: The experimental results presented here suggest that coating silicone graft material with antibiotics, particularly rifampin/minocycline, can reduce the incidence of graft colonization in contaminated wounds in rats, even in the absence of systemic antibiotics. These graft materials may prove useful in preventing the infection of penile prostheses.
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