Vaccine to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infection

Tech ID: T-013965

Technology Description

Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have developed a vaccine strategy to prevent catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs). CAUTIs are the most common cause of hospital-acquired infections. Many of these are caused by Enterococcus bacteria. CAUTIs are very difficult to treat and treatment has been further complicated by the rise in antibiotic resistance. Thus, new therapies and preventative strategies are needed. To help meet this need the inventors took advantage of their work identifying the mechanism by which Enterococcus faecalis causes CAUTIs. They found catheterization causes the release of fibrinogen which is deposited on the catheter. The bacterial protein EbpA then mediates binding of the bacteria to the fibrinogen to enable formation of a bacterial biofilm on the catheter. Identification of this key step to infection allowed the inventors to develop a EbpA-based vaccine that prevented CAUTIs in mice. (See below for model.) The vaccine strategy provided by this technology may be developed into a much needed therapeutic to prevent or treat human CAUTIs.

Stage of Research

  • Using mouse models of CAUTI, the inventors showed that vaccination with EbpA inhibited biofilm formation in vivo and protected against CAUTIs.

Applications

  • Treatment and prevention of catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI)

Key Advantages

  • Solves an unmet need- provides a much-needed therapeutic strategy to treat or prevent CAUTIs
  • Potential for use in other catheter-related and Ebp pilus-related diseases

Publications

Patents

Related Web Links

Model of E. faecalis pathogenesis during CAUTIs

Categories

Inventors

Contact

Han, Nathan

d.han@wustl.edu

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