Communications Materials (Jul 2024)

Nitric oxide-generating metallic wires for enhanced metal implants

  • Federico Mazur,
  • Yingzhu Zhou,
  • Gervase Ng,
  • Qingqing Fan,
  • Andy-Hoai Pham,
  • Cyrille Boyer,
  • Rona Chandrawati

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43246-024-00564-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Metallic implants are integral in modern medicine, offering excellent biocompatibility and mechanical properties. However, implant-related infections pose a major challenge. Current drug delivery methods, such as surface-coated and drug-eluting implants, are limited by finite drug supplies and complex manufacturing steps. Recent approaches like local drug synthesis, including enzyme-prodrug therapies, present innovative solutions but are hampered by the inherent limitations of enzymes as well as complex procedures. Here, we introduce a simpler alternative: using the intrinsic properties of implant materials to activate prodrugs. Through a simple thermal treatment, metallic implants gain catalytic properties to locally generate nitric oxide, an antibacterial agent. Our findings show this treatment is non-toxic to cells, does not affect cell proliferation rates, and effectively inhibits bacterial biofilm formation. This material-driven approach eliminates the need for external chemical or enzymatic interventions, offering a promising solution to prevent implant-related infections and improve patient outcomes in implant medicine.