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Staphylococcal biofilm growth on smooth and porous titanium coatings for biomedical applications

Year: 2014

Journal: JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH PART A, Vol. 102, p 215-224, 20150722

Authors: Braem, Annabel; Van Mellaert, Lieve; Mattheys, Tina; Hofmans, Dorien; De Waelheyns, Evelien; Geris, Liesbet; Anne, Jozef; Schrooten, Jan; Vleugels, Jef

Organizations: Katholieke Univ Leuven, Dept Met & Mat Engn MTM, B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium; Katholieke Univ Leuven, Rega Inst Med Res, Lab Mol Bacteriol, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium; U Liege, Biomech Res Unit, B-4000 Liege 1, Belgium

Implant-related infections are a serious complication in prosthetic surgery, substantially jeopardizing implant fixation. As porous coatings for improved osseointegration typically present an increased surface roughness, their resulting large surface area (sometimes increasing with over 700% compared to an ideal plane) renders the implant extremely susceptible to bacterial colonization and subsequent biofilm formation. Therefore, there is particular interest in orthopaedic implantology to engineer surfaces that combine both the ability to improve osseointegration and at the same time reduce the infection risk. As part of this orthopaedic coating development, the interest of in vitro studies on the interaction between implant surfaces and bacteria/biofilms is growing. In this study, the in vitro staphylococcal adhesion and biofilm formation on newly developed porous pure Ti coatings with 50% porosity and pore sizes up to 50 m is compared to various dense and porous Ti or Ti-6Al-4V reference surfaces. Multiple linear regression analysis indicates that surface roughness and hydrophobicity are the main determinants for bacterial adherence. Accordingly, the novel coatings display a significant reduction of up to five times less bacterial surface colonization when compared to a commercial state-of-the-art vacuum plasma sprayed coating. However, the results also show that a further expansion of the porosity with over 15% and/or the pore size up to 150 m is correlated to a significant increase in the roughness parameters resulting in an ascent of bacterial attachment. Chemically modifying the Ti surface in order to improve its hydrophilicity, while preserving the average roughness, is found to strongly decrease bacteria quantities, indicating the importance of surface functionalization to reduce the infection risk of porous coatings. (c) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A: 102A: 215-224, 2014.