3D scaffold with effective multidrug sequential release against bacteria biofilm
Rafaela Garcia-Alvarez, Isabel Izquierdo-Barba, Maria Vallet-Regi

TL;DR
This study presents a novel 3D scaffold with sequential multidrug release capabilities designed to effectively combat bacterial biofilms and promote bone regeneration in infected areas.
Contribution
The paper introduces a hierarchical 3D scaffold with compartmentalized drug loading for controlled, sequential antimicrobial release, enhancing infection treatment and bone healing.
Findings
Effective sequential release of three antibiotics demonstrated.
The scaffold inhibits bacterial biofilms and supports cell growth.
Good biocompatibility and bioactivity observed in vitro.
Abstract
Bone infection is a feared complication following surgery or trauma that remains as an extremely difficult disease to deal with. So far, the outcome of therapy could be improved with the design of 3D implants, which combine the merits of osseous regeneration and local multidrug therapy so as to avoid bacterial growth, drug resistance and the feared side effects. Herein, hierarchical 3D multidrug scaffolds based on nanocomposite bioceramic and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) prepared by rapid prototyping with an external coating of gelatin-glutaraldehyde (Gel-Glu) have been fabricated. These 3D scaffolds contain three antimicrobial agents (rifampin, levofloxacin and vancomycin), which have been localized in different compartments of the scaffold to obtain different release kinetics and more effective combined therapy. Levofloxacin was loaded into the mesopores of nanocomposite bioceramic part,…
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