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MBEC Versus MBIC: the Lack of Differentiation between Biofilm Reducing and Inhibitory Effects as a Current Problem in Biofilm Methodology.

AbstractBACKGROUND:
Biofilms are communities of aggregated, matrix-embedded microbial cells showing a high tolerance to an in principle adequate antibiotic therapy, often resulting in treatment failure. A major challenge in the management of biofilm-associated infections is the development of adequate, standardized biofilm susceptibility testing assays that are clinically meaningful, i.e. that their results correlate with treatment outcome. Different biofilm susceptibility endpoint parameters like the minimal biofilm eradication concentration (MBEC) or the minimal biofilm inhibitory concentration (MBIC) have been suggested as a guide for treatment of biofilm-associated infections, however with inconsistent perception and use among biofilm researchers, leading to confusion and contradictions among different anti-biofilm component studies and clinical trials.
FINDINGS:
Evaluation of anti-biofilm effects is mostly based on the untreated reference growth control biofilm measured at the same endpoint as the treated biofilm, neglecting the possible change of the untreated reference biofilm from the time point of pre-antimicrobial exposure to the measured endpoint. In this commentary, we point out the importance of individual quantification of mature, established biofilms before antimicrobial treatment for each biofilm model in order to draw conclusions on the measured biofilm effect size, i.e. biofilm reducing (MBEC) or biofilm inhibitory (MBIC) effects.
CONCLUSION:
The assessment of pre-treatment biofilms contributes to a standardized use of biofilm susceptibility endpoint parameters, which is urgently needed to improve the clinical validity of future anti-biofilm assays.
AuthorsLara Thieme, Anita Hartung, Kristina Tramm, Mareike Klinger-Strobel, Klaus D Jandt, Oliwia Makarewicz, Mathias W Pletz
JournalBiological procedures online (Biol Proced Online) Vol. 21 Pg. 18 ( 2019) ISSN: 1480-9222 [Print] England
PMID31528123 (Publication Type: Journal Article)

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