4.5 Article

Antimicrobial coating prevents ventilator-associated pneumonia in a 72 hour large animal model

Journal

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 267, Issue -, Pages 424-431

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2021.05.046

Keywords

Octadecylamine; Ventilator-associated pneumonia; Pig; Bacteria; Endotracheal tubes

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Funding

  1. United States Air Force [FA8650-17-2-6G23]

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The study demonstrates that endotracheal tubes coated with antimicrobial lipids can significantly reduce the risk of pneumonia in pig lungs after mechanical ventilation and improve survival rates. Among the tubes coated with multiple drugs, the combination of octadecylamine, N-acetylcysteine, doxycycline, and levofloxacin had the best results in terms of reducing bacterial colonization.
Background: The primary goal of this study was to demonstrate that endotracheal tubes coated with antimicrobial lipids plus mucolytic or antimicrobial lipids with antibiotics plus mucolytic would significantly reduce pneumonia in the lungs of pigs after 72 hours of continuous mechanical ventilation compared to uncoated controls. Materials and Methods: Eighteen female pigs were mechanically ventilated for up to 72 hours through uncoated endotracheal tubes, endotracheal tubes coated with the antimicrobial lipid, octadecylamine, and the mucolytic, N-acetylcysteine, or tubes coated with octadecylamine, N-acetylcysteine, doxycycline, and levofloxacin (6 pigs per group). No exogenous bacteria were inoculated into the pigs, pneumonia resulted from the pigs' endogenous oral flora. Vital signs were recorded every 15 minutes and arterial blood gas measurements were obtained for the duration of the experiment. Pigs were sacrificed either after completion of 72 hours of mechanical ventilation or just prior to hypoxic arrest. Lungs, trachea, and endotracheal tubes were harvested for analysis to include bacterial counts of lung, trachea, and endotracheal tubes, lung wet and dry weights, and lung tissue for histology. Results: Pigs ventilated with coated endotracheal tubes were less hypoxic, had less bacterial colonization of the lungs, and survived significantly longer than pigs ventilated with uncoated tubes. Octadecylamine-N-acetylcysteine-doxycycline-levofloxacin coated endotracheal tubes had less bacterial colonization than uncoated or octadecylamine-Nacetylcysteine coated tubes.

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