• Annals of surgery · Sep 2022

    A Novel Non-Antibiotic Gut-Directed Strategy to Prevent Surgical Site Infections.

    • Sanjiv K Hyoju, Robert Keskey, Gerardo Castillo, Kaylie Machutta, Alexander Zaborin, Olga Zaborina, and John C Alverdy.
    • Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
    • Ann. Surg. 2022 Sep 1; 276 (3): 472481472-481.

    ObjectiveTo determine the efficacy of an orally delivered phosphate-rich polymer, Pi-PEG, to prevent surgical site infection (SSI) in a mouse model of spontaneous wound infection involving gut-derived pathogens.BackgroundEvidence suggests that pathogens originating from the gut microbiota can cause postoperative infection via a process by which they silently travel inside an immune cell and contaminate a remote operative site (Trojan Horse Hypothesis). Here, we hypothesize that Pi-PEG can prevent SSIs in a novel model of postoperative SSIs in mice.MethodsMice were fed either a standard chow diet (high fiber/low fat, SD) or a western-type diet (low fiber/high fat, WD), and exposed to antibiotics (oral clindamycin/intraperitoneal cefoxitin). Groups of mice had Pi-PEG added to their drinking water and SSI incidence was determined. Gross clinical infections wound cultures and amplicon sequence variant analysis of the intestinal contents and wound were assessed to determine the incidence and source of the developing SSI.ResultsIn this model, consumption of a WD and exposure to antibiotics promoted the growth of SSI pathogens in the gut and their subsequent presence in the wound. Mice subjected to this model drinking water spiked with Pi-PEG were protected against SSIs via mechanisms involving modulation of the gut-wound microbiome.ConclusionsA nonantibiotic phosphate-rich polymer, Pi-PEG, added to the drinking water of mice prevents SSIs and may represent a more sustainable approach in lieu of the current trend of greater sterility and the use of more powerful and broader antibiotic coverage.Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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