Development, characterization, and evaluation of a simple polymicrobial colony biofilm model for testing of antimicrobial wound dressings

Author:

Robertson Shaun N1ORCID,Romero Manuel123ORCID,Fenn Samuel14,Kohler Riedi Petra L5,Cámara Miguel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Biofilms Innovation Centre, School of Life Sciences, Biodiscovery Institute, University of Nottingham , NG7 2RD Nottingham , United Kingdom

2. Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Biology–CIBUS, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela , Santiago de Compostela 15782 , Spain

3. Aquatic One Health Research Center (ARCUS), Universidade de Santiago de Compostela , Santiago de Compostela 15782 , Spain

4. Schools of Microbiology and Medicine, University College Cork, and APC Microbiome Ireland , Cork T12 TP07 , Ireland

5. 3 M Corporate Research Materials Laboratory , St. Paul, MN 55406 , United States

Abstract

Abstract   Chronic wound infections are generally of polymicrobial nature with aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, as well as fungi frequently observed in them. Wound treatment involves a series of steps, including debridement of the wound, flushing, and often the use of multiple wound dressings many of which are antimicrobial. Yet, many wound dressings are tested versus single species of planktonic microbes, which fails to mirror the real-life presence of biofilms. Aims Simple biofilm models are the first step to testing of any antimicrobial and wound dressing; therefore, the aim of this study was to develop and validate a simple polymicrobial colony biofilm wound model comprised of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Candida albicans on RPMI-1640 agar. The model was then used to evaluate the topical disinfectant chlorohexidine and four commercially available wound dressings using the polymicrobial model. The model used was as a starting point to mimic debridement in clinical care of wounds and the effectiveness of wound dressings evaluated afterwards. Methods and Results Planktonic assessment using AATCC100-2004 demonstrated that all antimicrobial wound dressings reduced the planktonic microbial burden below the limit of detection; however, when challenged with polymicrobial colony biofilms, silver wound dressings showed limited effectiveness (1–2 log CFU reductions). In contrast, a single iodine releasing wound dressing showed potent antibiofilm activity reducing all species CFUs below the limit of detection (>6–10 log) depending on the species. A disrupted biofilm model challenge was performed to represent the debridement of a wound and wound silver-based wound dressings were found to be marginally more effective than in whole colony biofilm challenges while the iodine containing wound dressing reduced microbial recovery below the limit of detection. Conclusions In this model, silver dressings were ineffective versus the whole colony biofilms but showed some recovery of activity versus the disrupted colony biofilm. The iodine wound dressing reduced the viability of all species below the level of detection. This suggests that mode of action of wound dressing should be considered for the type of biofilm challenge as should the clinical use, e.g. debridement.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

3M

Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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