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Review Article

Recent advances on topical antimicrobials for skin and soft tissue infections and their safety concerns

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Pages 40-78 | Received 05 Sep 2015, Accepted 25 Mar 2017, Published online: 19 Apr 2017
 

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance of disease-related microorganisms is considered a worldwide prevalent and serious issue which increases the failure of treatment outcomes and leads to high mortality. Considering that the increased resistance to systemic antimicrobial therapy often needs of the use of more toxic agents, topical antimicrobial therapy emerges as an attractive route for the treatment of infectious diseases. The topical antimicrobial therapy is based on the absorption of high drug doses in a readily accessible skin surface, resulting in a reduction of microbial proliferation at infected skin sites. Topical antimicrobials retain the following features: (a) they are able to escape the enzymatic degradation and rapid clearance in the gastrointestinal tract or the first-pass metabolism during oral administration; (b) alleviate the physical discomfort related to intravenous injection; (c) reduce possible adverse effects and drug interactions of systemic administrations; (d) increase patient compliance and convenience; and (e) reduce the treatment costs. Novel antimicrobials for topical application have been widely exploited to control the emergence of drug-resistant microorganisms. This review provides a description of antimicrobial resistance, common microorganisms causing skin and soft tissue infections, topical delivery route of antimicrobials, safety concerns of topical antimicrobials, recent advances, challenges and future prospective in topical antimicrobial development.

Acknowledgements

This work is supported by the Innovation Technology Commission to ABCT, HKPU, and the account codes: FRG1/14-15/078 and 38-40-116 (Dr. C. H. Chui). Professor R. Gambari is supported by AIRC (IG-13575) and by FFC (Italian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation).

Disclosure statement

The authors report no declarations of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This work is supported by the Innovation Technology Commission to ABCT, HKPU, and the account codes: FRG1/14-15/078 and 38-40-116 (Dr. C. H. Chui). Professor R. Gambari is supported by AIRC (IG-13575) and by FFC (Italian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation).

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