Microbial biofilm correlates with an increased antibiotic tolerance and poor therapeutic outcome in infective endocarditis.

微生物生物膜与感染性心内膜炎的抗生素耐受性增加和治疗效果不佳相关

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作者:Di Domenico Enea Gino, Rimoldi Sara Giordana, Cavallo Ilaria, D'Agosto Giovanna, Trento Elisabetta, Cagnoni Giovanni, Palazzin Alessandro, Pagani Cristina, Romeri Francesca, De Vecchi Elena, Schiavini Monica, Secchi Daniela, Antona Carlo, Rizzardini Giuliano, Dichirico Rita Barbara, Toma Luigi, Kovacs Daniela, Cardinali Giorgia, Gallo Maria Teresa, Gismondo Maria Rita, Ensoli Fabrizio
BACKGROUND: Infective endocarditis (IE) is associated with high rates of mortality. Prolonged treatments with high-dose intravenous antibiotics often fail to eradicate the infection, frequently leading to high-risk surgical intervention. By providing a mechanism of antibiotic tolerance, which escapes conventional antibiotic susceptibility profiling, microbial biofilm represents a key diagnostic and therapeutic challenge for clinicians. This study aims at assessing a rapid biofilm identification assay and a targeted antimicrobial susceptibility profile of biofilm-growing bacteria in patients with IE, which were unresponsive to antibiotic therapy. RESULTS: Staphylococcus aureus was the most common isolate (50%), followed by Enterococcus faecalis (25%) and Streptococcus gallolyticus (25%). All microbial isolates were found to be capable of producing large, structured biofilms in vitro. As expected, antibiotic treatment either administered on the basis of antibiogram or chosen empirically among those considered first-line antibiotics for IE, including ceftriaxone, daptomycin, tigecycline and vancomycin, was not effective at eradicating biofilm-growing bacteria. Conversely, antimicrobial susceptibility profile of biofilm-growing bacteria indicated that teicoplanin, oxacillin and fusidic acid were most effective against S. aureus biofilm, while ampicillin was the most active against S. gallolyticus and E. faecalis biofilm, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: This study indicates that biofilm-producing bacteria, from surgically treated IE, display a high tolerance to antibiotics, which is undetected by conventional antibiograms. The rapid identification and antimicrobial tolerance profiling of biofilm-growing bacteria in IE can provide key information for both antimicrobial therapy and prevention strategies.

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