ANTIMICROBIAL SILVER COMPLEX COATED SURFACE
20170239394 · 2017-08-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61L2430/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/306
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/54
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L2300/404
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to orthopedic implants, in particular to hip and knee prostheses, substantially involving metallic substrates with an antibacterial surface treatment consisting of silver immobilized in an organic linker and ligand via a multistep solution dipping and drying process. This treatment while being biocompatible is designed to inhibit bacterial growth and therefore combat periprosthetic infection which is one of the main causes of revision in hip and knee arthroplasty.
Claims
1. A coated Chromium-Cobalt-Molybdenum alloy material of formula (I):
[Ag+-Ligand-Ag+]-[linker]CrCoMo (I) wherein: CrCoMo is an alloy substrate comprising Chromium, Cobalt and Molybdenum, ---- is a coordination or a covalent bond; -Ligand- is a divalent group selected from: ##STR00008## wherein: ##STR00009## n=1 or 2 -linker- is a divalent group selected from: ##STR00010## wherein: ##STR00011## wherein the terminal aromatic rings of the linker or the ligand are heteroaromatic rings having at least one nitrogen in place of a carbon atom; the terminal rings of the linker or the ligand can optionally be substituted with one or more —NH.sub.2 group; wherein the ligand binds the Ag+ ions by the at least one nitrogen atom of the terminal aromatic rings; and wherein the linker binds the Ag+ atom by the at least one heteroatom of one terminal aromatic ring and the CrCoMo surface by an atom selected from: O, N and S.
2. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein X=oxygen.
3. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein n=2.
4. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein the ligand moiety is a pyridine derivative of formula: ##STR00012## in which the two terminal pyridine nitrogen atoms each binds a silver ion (Ag+).
5. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein the linker has the general formula: ##STR00013## wherein: ##STR00014##
6. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein the group C.sub.1-C.sub.4Alk in the linker R group is a —CH.sub.2—CH.sub.2— moiety.
7. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein the CrCoMo substrate contains 26-30% of Cr, 5-7% of Mo, 1% of Ni, 0.75% of Fe, 1% of Mn, 1% of Si, 0.25% of N and 0.14-0.35% of C.
8. (canceled)
9. An orthopedic or dental prosthesis made with the alloy material of claim 1.
10. A process for the preparation of the alloy material according to any of claim 1, comprising the steps of: 1) gritblasting the surface of a CrCoMo alloy material to be coated, to achieve a controlled roughness, 2) alkaline washing and drying the alloy material, 3) acidic passivation of the thus treated alloy material, 4) linker deposition on the surface, 5) Silver compound dip-coating or spraying and drying, 6) multistep washing, and optionally 7) packaging and gamma rays sterilization.
11. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein the ligand binds the Ag+ atom by a pyridine nitrogen atom of at least one terminal aromatic ring.
12. The alloy material of claim 1, wherein the linker bonds the Ag+ atom by a pyridine nitrogen atom of a terminal aromatic ring.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
DETAIL DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0045] The term “C.sub.1-C.sub.4Alk” means a linear or branched divalent alkyl chain, having from 1 to 4 carbon atom, such as: —CH.sub.2—, —CH.sub.2—CH.sub.2— and the like.
[0046] The present coated CrCoMo alloy is particularly useful for the realization of orthopedic prosthesis, being easy to prepare, endowed with a high biocompatibility, and designed to inhibit bacterial growth thus preventing periprosthetic infection.
[0047] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, in both the ligand and the linker structures of formula (I), the terminal aromatic rings are pyridines, substituted in para position with the R/R1 group.
[0048] In more details, the present CrCoMo alloy is preferably coated with a complex according to formula (I) wherein the ligand has the above indicated formula wherein X=oxygen.
[0049] Still preferred are ligands wherein n=2.
[0050] In a more preferred embodiment, the ligand moiety is a pyridine derivative of formula:
##STR00005##
[0051] wherein the two terminal pyridine nitrogen atoms each binds a silver ion (Ag+).
[0052] In a preferred embodiment, the alloy of the invention is coated with a linker of general formula:
##STR00006##
[0053] wherein:
##STR00007##
[0054] Preferably, R is in para position, and the ring is a pyridine cycle.
[0055] Particularly preferred are linkers wherein the group C.sub.1-C.sub.4Alk in the above indicated R group is a —CH.sub.2—CH.sub.2— moiety, as for instance indicated in the preferred embodiment showed in
[0056] In this embodiment of the invention, the divalent linker binds on one side the surface by thiol sulfur atom, and on the other terminal side an Ag+ ion by the pyridine nitrogen atom; whereas the ligand binds this latter Ag+ ion by a pyridine nitrogen atom, and another Ag+ ion on the other end by a pyridine nitrogen atom as well.
[0057] The CrCoMo alloy used in the present invention is a CoCrMo ISO 5832-12, conventionally used for orthopedic implants. This alloy contains 26-30% of Cr, 5-7% of Mo, 1% of Ni, 0.75% of Fe, 1% of Mn, 1% of Si, 0.25% of N and 0.14-0.35% of C.
[0058] In an embodiment according to the invention, the CrCoMo alloy can be coated with a metallic foam, preferably a titanium foam, which can be applied on the alloy using a thermal spray technology, known in the art, for example from http://www.eurocoating.it/plasma_spray_coatings/growth/default.aspx.
[0059] The metallic coating is applied before the alloy is coated with the complex of formula (I).
[0060] The alloy material of the invention can be partially or completely coated with the antimicrobial composition comprising the complex of formula (I) as herein set forth.
[0061] “Partially coated” means that the alloy material has a percentage of coated surface up to 80%, whilst “completely coated” means that the material is coated from 80 to 100% of its surface.
[0062] Preferably, the material has a coated surface comprised from 70 to 90% of its surface.
[0063] The applicant has found that such alloy composition can be easily loaded with the above described Ag+/linker/ligand system, avoiding nevertheless the major problems related to the use of titanium oxide alloys.
[0064] The complex of formula (I) of the invention can be prepared by mixing the ligand and the appropriate silver salt, for instance as described in Journal of Materials Chemistry, 2008, 18, 5359-62, in the presence of a polar organic solvent such as a lower alcohol (i.e. having a number of carbon atoms from1 to 4), THF, CH.sub.3CN and the like.
[0065] According to the present invention, the linker moiety binds the surface of the Cr—Co—Mo alloy preferably via covalent bonds, thus ensuring a strong and durable attachment thereto. Such polymeric network can then act as reservoir of silver (Ag+) ions and is capable of releasing bactericidal levels of Ag+ ions for an extended period of time at a safe concentration. In this way, the resulting material is endowed with: light and mechanical stability, long term antimicrobial activity, reproducibility, non-toxicity and high bio-integration.
[0066] In a further aspect, the invention refers to the use of the above described Cr—Co—Mo alloy coated material of formula(I) in orthopedic or dental field, in particular for the preparation of orthopedic or dental implants. In this regard, preferred orthopedic implants of the invention are selected from: hip, knees, shoulder, wrist and spine.
[0067] Advantageously, said implants can be prepared by only minor modifications in the current prosthesis manufacturing process, also reducing infections that have damaging effect on the patient health.
[0068] The present invention also refers to a process for the preparation of the above described antimicrobic material. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the manufacturing process involves the following steps of:
[0069] 1) gritblasting the surface of CrCoMo alloy to coat to achieve a controlled roughness.
[0070] 2) Alkaline washing with a ethanolamine in an ultrasonic bath followed by drying in oven to remove the oily residues and debris;
[0071] 3) Passivation with citric acid or nitric acid or sulfuric acid;
[0072] 4) Linker deposition, using dip-coating or spraying, for a time ranging from a few hours to 5 days;
[0073] 5) Applying the silver compound using dip-coating or spraying technique;
[0074] 6) Multistep washing in an ultrasonic bath;
[0075] a) sodium and potassium metasilicate then citric acid neutralization;
[0076] or b) enzymatic wash followed by metasilicate and ethanolamine wash;
[0077] or c) wash using other solvents such as hydrofluoro ether and isopropyl alcohol vapour
[0078] and optionally
[0079] 7) packaging and gamma rays (25 Krays) sterilization.
[0080] The orthopedic products made of Cobalt Chromium Molybdenum alloys and manufactured with the above described process have the following surprising characteristics at the moment of use:
[0081] a) they contain measurable amount of silver on their surfaces;
[0082] b) they release silver ions (Ag+) in body fluid for at least 24 days;
[0083] c) they inhibit the bacterial development of Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermis at their contact (Kirby-Bauer Test);
[0084] d) the linker/ligand coating survives the washing steps;
[0085] e) the linker/ligand coating survives the gamma sterilization cycles. Prior art indicates that ligand exhibits light stability but 25 Krays applied during gamma sterilization has a high radiation energy than light aging with a “15 watts bulb at 10 centimeters for months” (see for instance Vig Slenters et al. Journal of Materials Chemistry, 2008, 18, 5359-62).
[0086] f) the mouse cell line (L-929) is not compromised despite other publications on other silver based compounds (see for example Peetsch et al. colloid surfaces B, 2013, 102, 724-29). The silver coordination networks are made relatively insoluble in water and therefore they keep the silver ion release below the cytotoxic limit. It is however surprising that the low solubility does not compromise bacterial inhibition, even after radiation sterilization.
[0087] The invention will be now described with the following not limiting experimental part
[0088] Experimental Part
EXAMPLE 1
Preparation of the Antimicrobial Composition Comprising a Complex of Formula (I) (General Procedure)
[0089] A solution of Linker (L) INA derivative (one or two equivalents depending on the desired ratio M:L) in solvent THF is introduced in one side of the tube, a solution of silver salts (AgX) in H.sub.2O or EtOH or CH.sub.3CN being introduced on the other side. Both solutions are frozen and the diffusion solvent THF is added to connect both. The tube stays then at room temperature in darkness and diffusion can occur.
[0090] Slow Diffusion:
[0091] One (or two) equivalent of silver salt (depending on the desired ratio M:L) and one equivalent of ligand are mixed in CH.sub.3OH, THF or CH.sub.3CN. The reaction occurs during ca. 24 hours at room temperature. In the case of solubility problems, the reaction solution in the Schlenk tube is heated under reflux. After filtration, the method of slow diffusion is used to obtain a single crystalline product. In the bottom of the flask the mother solution is deposited, representing ca. 30% of the total volume of the solution. On top of this, a second phase of solvent (hexane, CH.sub.3CN or THF) is carefully layered with a syringe in order not to mix the two phases. Slow diffusion occurs at room temperature.
EXAMPLE 2
Preparation of a Silver Coated Co—Cr—Mo Alloy Surface According to the Invention
[0092] Discs of 10 mm diameter and 2 mm thickness made out of CoCrMo ISO 5832-12 were gritblasted with alumina microspheres on one face in order to obtain a roughness factor (Ra) of 3 microns. They were subjected to the manufacturing coating process of the invention with the following process parameters: [0093] Alkaline wash with Deconnex (MEA) during 12 minutes, [0094] Passivation with nitric acid (32%) for 1 hour at room temperature, [0095] INA (5 mM) linker deposition during 3, 5, 24 and 120 hours, [0096] L1AG (2 mM) coated and dried twice for 3 hours, [0097] HFE/IPA solvent wash,
[0098] The discs were either packaged and gamma sterilized (see results in example 3.1) or not sterilized (see results in Example 3.2).
EXAMPLE 3
Antimicrobial Activity
[0099] The sterilized and the not-sterilized discs of the invention obtained in Example 2 have been subjected to some analytical and in vitro analysis as herein above described.
[0100] 3.1 Non-Sterilized Discs
[0101] a) Surface X-Ray diffraction (silver-compound coated alloy surfaces were submitted to the X-Ray diffraction beam) confirmed the presence of silver on the surface for linker deposition of 24 and 120 hours (see
[0102] b) ICP-OES (inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry) measurements in PBS (silver-compound coated alloy surfaces were immersed in PBS solution for a determined time before being placed in another PBS solution for the following times; the removed solutions from each surface were diluted in water with nitric acid and submitted to the measurement) indicated an Ag+ ion release during at least 24 days (see
[0103] c) In vitro Kirby-Bauer test (coated alloy surfaces were placed in a Petri-dish plate layered by a Muller-Hinton Agar mixture containing different bacterial loads; after a 24 h incubation time at 37° C., antimicrobial activity was verified with the appearance of a zone of inhibition that remained free from microbial growth) indicated an inhibition zone with S. aureus for linker deposition of 24 and 120 hours (see
[0104] 3.2 Sterilized Discs [0105] In vitro Kirby-Bauer bacterial inhibition tests were performed with S. aureus and S. epidermis strains CoCrMo discs after sterilization: it is surprising to evidence a large inhibition zone with both strains despite of the numerous treatments (washing and sterilization) applied to these discs (see
[0107] This result is surprising as other studies made on other silver-coated materials indicate a significant cytotoxicity (see for instance A. Peetsch et al. Colloid Surfaces B, 2013, 102:724-729, and C. Greulich et al. Langenbecks Arch Surg, 2009, 394:495-502).