LL-37 for Chronic and Biofilm-Associated Infections
Peptides Academy Editorial
Editorial Team
Candidate profile
Adults with chronic, recurrent, or antibiotic-resistant infections where biofilm formation is suspected or documented. Common presentations:
- Chronic sinusitis with culture-positive MARCoNS (multiple antibiotic-resistant coagulase-negative staphylococci) — often in the context of CIRS
- Chronic Lyme disease or post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome with persistent symptoms
- Recurrent urinary tract infections unresponsive to standard antibiotic courses
- Chronic wound infections with suspected biofilm component
Not appropriate for: acute bacterial infections (use antibiotics), viral infections (LL-37 has limited antiviral activity), or as a replacement for appropriate antimicrobial therapy.
Approach
LL-37 is the only human cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide — a 37-amino-acid peptide cleaved from the precursor hCAP-18. It functions as a first-line innate defense molecule with three relevant mechanisms:
- Direct antimicrobial activity — LL-37 disrupts bacterial membranes through electrostatic interaction with negatively charged lipid bilayers. Effective against gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, and some fungi
- Biofilm disruption — LL-37 prevents biofilm formation and disrupts established biofilms at sub-bactericidal concentrations. This is its most clinically interesting property for chronic infections, as biofilm-protected bacteria are 100–1000× more resistant to conventional antibiotics
- Immune modulation — LL-37 recruits immune cells to infection sites, modulates dendritic cell activation, and promotes wound healing. It serves as a bridge between innate and adaptive immunity
Protocol design
Peptide: LL-37, 100 mcg subcutaneous daily
Route: Subcutaneous (abdominal or deltoid), or intranasal for sinus-targeted applications
Duration: 4–8 weeks
Optional adjunct: Thymosin alpha-1, 1.6 mg subcutaneous 2–3 times weekly (for comprehensive immune support alongside LL-37's antimicrobial action)
For MARCoNS/sinus infections:
- Nasal spray formulation: LL-37 combined with EDTA-based biofilm disruptor
- BEG spray (Bactroban/EDTA/Gentamicin) is the conventional approach; LL-37 nasal spray is an emerging adjunct or alternative
Expected timeline
Week 1–2: Minimal clinical change. Biofilm disruption is gradual, not immediate.
Weeks 3–4: Possible increase in symptoms ("die-off" or Herxheimer-like reaction as biofilm-protected organisms are exposed). Some patients experience temporary worsening before improvement.
Weeks 5–6: Progressive improvement in chronic infection symptoms. For MARCoNS, repeat nasal culture at 4 weeks may show reduced colony counts.
Weeks 7–8: Consolidation. Repeat cultures to assess microbial clearance. Symptom improvement should be progressive.
Monitoring
- Microbial cultures (baseline, 4 weeks, 8 weeks): nasal culture for MARCoNS, urine culture for UTI, wound culture as appropriate
- Inflammatory markers: CRP, ESR, white blood cell count
- Symptom tracking: Infection-specific symptoms (sinus pain, urinary symptoms, wound appearance)
- For CIRS context: MARCoNS culture status, VCS testing, and upstream CIRS markers
Important caveats
- LL-37 has dual roles — antimicrobial and pro-inflammatory. In some contexts (psoriasis, rosacea), LL-37 is pathologically elevated and contributes to disease. Exogenous LL-37 in patients with LL-37-mediated conditions could theoretically worsen inflammation
- Human clinical data for exogenous LL-37 administration is very limited. Most evidence is in-vitro and animal models
- LL-37 is being developed for wound healing applications (topical formulations) with clinical trials underway, but injectable use for chronic infections is not supported by published clinical trials
- Biofilm-associated infections are complex. LL-37 may be one component of a comprehensive strategy that includes appropriate antibiotics, biofilm disruptors, and immune support — not a standalone cure
- Product quality and stability of LL-37 preparations vary significantly between compounding sources
Related Peptides
LL-37
Research-Grade
A 37-amino-acid human cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide with broad-spectrum activity against bacteria, fungi, and biofilms, plus immunomodulatory and wound-healing properties.
Thymosin α1
Zadaxin
A 28-amino-acid thymic peptide approved in 30+ countries (not US) for hepatitis B/C and as an immune adjunct in oncology and infectious disease.
KPV
Research-Grade
A C-terminal tripeptide fragment of alpha-MSH with potent anti-inflammatory activity, studied for its role in modulating NF-κB signaling without melanogenic effects.
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