Standard

In vitro methods for the evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs. / Sjollema, Jelmer; Zaat, Sebastian A. J.; Fontaine, Veronique et al.

In: Acta biomaterialia, Vol. 70, 2018, p. 12-24.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Harvard

Sjollema, J, Zaat, SAJ, Fontaine, V, Ramstedt, M, Luginbuehl, R, Thevissen, K, Li, J, van der Mei, HC & Busscher, HJ 2018, 'In vitro methods for the evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs', Acta biomaterialia, vol. 70, pp. 12-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2018.02.001

APA

Sjollema, J., Zaat, S. A. J., Fontaine, V., Ramstedt, M., Luginbuehl, R., Thevissen, K., Li, J., van der Mei, H. C., & Busscher, H. J. (2018). In vitro methods for the evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs. Acta biomaterialia, 70, 12-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2018.02.001

Vancouver

Sjollema J, Zaat SAJ, Fontaine V, Ramstedt M, Luginbuehl R, Thevissen K et al. In vitro methods for the evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs. Acta biomaterialia. 2018;70:12-24. doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2018.02.001

Author

Sjollema, Jelmer ; Zaat, Sebastian A. J. ; Fontaine, Veronique et al. / In vitro methods for the evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs. In: Acta biomaterialia. 2018 ; Vol. 70. pp. 12-24.

BibTeX

@article{fb0954937fc24d0e9204712ebbb0cdf5,
title = "In vitro methods for the evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs",
abstract = "Bacterial adhesion and subsequent biofilm formation on biomedical implants and devices are a major cause of their failure. As systemic antibiotic treatment is often ineffective, there is an urgent need for antimicrobial biomaterials and coatings. The term {"}antimicrobial{"} can encompass different mechanisms of action (here termed {"}antimicrobial surface designs{"}), such as antimicrobial-releasing, contact-killing or non-adhesivity. Biomaterials equipped with antimicrobial surface designs based on different mechanisms of action require different in vitro evaluation methods. Available industrial standard evaluation tests do not address the specific mechanisms of different antimicrobial surface designs and have therefore been modified over the past years, adding to the myriad of methods available in the literature to evaluate antimicrobial surface designs. The aim of this review is to categorize fourteen presently available methods including industrial standard tests for the in vitro evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs according to their suitability with respect to their antimicrobial mechanism of action. There is no single method or industrial test that allows to distinguish antimicrobial designs according to all three mechanisms identified here. However, critical consideration of each method clearly relates the different methods to a specific mechanism of antimicrobial action. It is anticipated that use of the provided table with the fourteen methods will avoid the use of wrong methods for evaluating new antimicrobial designs and therewith facilitate translation of novel antimicrobial biomaterials and coatings to clinical use. The need for more and better updated industrial standard tests is emphasized. European COST-action TD1305, IPROMEDAI aims to provide better understanding of mechanisms of antimicrobial surface designs of biomaterial implants and devices. Current industrial evaluation standard tests do not sufficiently account for different, advanced antimicrobial surface designs, yet are urgently needed to obtain convincing in vitro data for approval of animal experiments and clinical trials. This review aims to provide an innovative and clear guide to choose appropriate evaluation methods for three distinctly different mechanisms of antimicrobial design: (1) antimicrobial-releasing, (2) contact-killing and (3) non-adhesivity. Use of antimicrobial evaluation methods and definition of industrial standard tests, tailored toward the antimicrobial mechanism of the design, as identified here, fulfill a missing link in the translation of novel antimicrobial surface designs to clinical use",
author = "Jelmer Sjollema and Zaat, {Sebastian A. J.} and Veronique Fontaine and Madeleine Ramstedt and Reto Luginbuehl and Karin Thevissen and Jiuyi Li and {van der Mei}, {Henny C.} and Busscher, {Henk J.}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1016/j.actbio.2018.02.001",
language = "English",
volume = "70",
pages = "12--24",
journal = "Acta biomaterialia",
issn = "1742-7061",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - In vitro methods for the evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs

AU - Sjollema, Jelmer

AU - Zaat, Sebastian A. J.

AU - Fontaine, Veronique

AU - Ramstedt, Madeleine

AU - Luginbuehl, Reto

AU - Thevissen, Karin

AU - Li, Jiuyi

AU - van der Mei, Henny C.

AU - Busscher, Henk J.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Bacterial adhesion and subsequent biofilm formation on biomedical implants and devices are a major cause of their failure. As systemic antibiotic treatment is often ineffective, there is an urgent need for antimicrobial biomaterials and coatings. The term "antimicrobial" can encompass different mechanisms of action (here termed "antimicrobial surface designs"), such as antimicrobial-releasing, contact-killing or non-adhesivity. Biomaterials equipped with antimicrobial surface designs based on different mechanisms of action require different in vitro evaluation methods. Available industrial standard evaluation tests do not address the specific mechanisms of different antimicrobial surface designs and have therefore been modified over the past years, adding to the myriad of methods available in the literature to evaluate antimicrobial surface designs. The aim of this review is to categorize fourteen presently available methods including industrial standard tests for the in vitro evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs according to their suitability with respect to their antimicrobial mechanism of action. There is no single method or industrial test that allows to distinguish antimicrobial designs according to all three mechanisms identified here. However, critical consideration of each method clearly relates the different methods to a specific mechanism of antimicrobial action. It is anticipated that use of the provided table with the fourteen methods will avoid the use of wrong methods for evaluating new antimicrobial designs and therewith facilitate translation of novel antimicrobial biomaterials and coatings to clinical use. The need for more and better updated industrial standard tests is emphasized. European COST-action TD1305, IPROMEDAI aims to provide better understanding of mechanisms of antimicrobial surface designs of biomaterial implants and devices. Current industrial evaluation standard tests do not sufficiently account for different, advanced antimicrobial surface designs, yet are urgently needed to obtain convincing in vitro data for approval of animal experiments and clinical trials. This review aims to provide an innovative and clear guide to choose appropriate evaluation methods for three distinctly different mechanisms of antimicrobial design: (1) antimicrobial-releasing, (2) contact-killing and (3) non-adhesivity. Use of antimicrobial evaluation methods and definition of industrial standard tests, tailored toward the antimicrobial mechanism of the design, as identified here, fulfill a missing link in the translation of novel antimicrobial surface designs to clinical use

AB - Bacterial adhesion and subsequent biofilm formation on biomedical implants and devices are a major cause of their failure. As systemic antibiotic treatment is often ineffective, there is an urgent need for antimicrobial biomaterials and coatings. The term "antimicrobial" can encompass different mechanisms of action (here termed "antimicrobial surface designs"), such as antimicrobial-releasing, contact-killing or non-adhesivity. Biomaterials equipped with antimicrobial surface designs based on different mechanisms of action require different in vitro evaluation methods. Available industrial standard evaluation tests do not address the specific mechanisms of different antimicrobial surface designs and have therefore been modified over the past years, adding to the myriad of methods available in the literature to evaluate antimicrobial surface designs. The aim of this review is to categorize fourteen presently available methods including industrial standard tests for the in vitro evaluation of antimicrobial surface designs according to their suitability with respect to their antimicrobial mechanism of action. There is no single method or industrial test that allows to distinguish antimicrobial designs according to all three mechanisms identified here. However, critical consideration of each method clearly relates the different methods to a specific mechanism of antimicrobial action. It is anticipated that use of the provided table with the fourteen methods will avoid the use of wrong methods for evaluating new antimicrobial designs and therewith facilitate translation of novel antimicrobial biomaterials and coatings to clinical use. The need for more and better updated industrial standard tests is emphasized. European COST-action TD1305, IPROMEDAI aims to provide better understanding of mechanisms of antimicrobial surface designs of biomaterial implants and devices. Current industrial evaluation standard tests do not sufficiently account for different, advanced antimicrobial surface designs, yet are urgently needed to obtain convincing in vitro data for approval of animal experiments and clinical trials. This review aims to provide an innovative and clear guide to choose appropriate evaluation methods for three distinctly different mechanisms of antimicrobial design: (1) antimicrobial-releasing, (2) contact-killing and (3) non-adhesivity. Use of antimicrobial evaluation methods and definition of industrial standard tests, tailored toward the antimicrobial mechanism of the design, as identified here, fulfill a missing link in the translation of novel antimicrobial surface designs to clinical use

U2 - 10.1016/j.actbio.2018.02.001

DO - 10.1016/j.actbio.2018.02.001

M3 - Article

C2 - 29432983

VL - 70

SP - 12

EP - 24

JO - Acta biomaterialia

JF - Acta biomaterialia

SN - 1742-7061

ER -

ID: 4626998