PeptideTrace
ApprovedPolypeptide Antibiotic (Topical)Immune & Anti-inflammatory

Bacitracin (Baciguent, Neosporin (combination))

A

Evidence Grade A — Regulatory approved. 4076 published studies. 39 registered clinical trials.

39 trials4,076 studiesUSEUCA

Medically reviewed by a licensed medical professional

Licensed Indications

  • Minor Wound Infection Prevention

User Experience Reports

Loading...

Overview

Bacitracin is one of the most familiar topical antibiotics in the world — it is a key ingredient in household first-aid products like Neosporin and Polysporin. Applied to minor cuts, scrapes, and burns, it kills bacteria on the skin's surface to help prevent infection. An injectable form exists but is almost never used because of severe kidney toxicity.

Also Known As

Bacitracin is also known by these brand and alternate names:

Research Activity

4,076studies
Human 1398
Animal 1227
In-vitro 438
Reviews 134

4,076 published studies: 1398 human, 1227 animal, 438 in-vitro, 134 reviews

Regulatory Status

US
FDA-approved(FDA)
EU
Not authorised by EMA(EMA)
CA
Health Canada approved(Health Canada)

Legal Status

USPrescription drug (Rx)
EUNot applicable (not authorised)
CAPrescription drug

Summary

Bacitracin is marketed as Baciguent (topical) and BACiiM (injection), and is a component of Neosporin and Polysporin. Approved in 1948, it is one of the oldest peptide antibiotics still in widespread use.

Topical bacitracin is available over the counter and is applied to minor cuts, scrapes, and burns to prevent infection. Its systemic use is limited to rare situations where no alternatives exist, due to severe nephrotoxicity. There has been growing discussion in wound care about whether routine topical antibiotic use on minor wounds provides meaningful benefit over simple petroleum jelly in keeping wounds moist, and about the risk of contact allergic dermatitis with repeated bacitracin use.

Mechanism of Action

Bacitracin disrupts bacterial cell wall construction at a different point than vancomycin. It binds to a lipid carrier molecule (undecaprenyl pyrophosphate) that acts as a shuttle, carrying cell wall building blocks across the bacterial membrane. By trapping this shuttle in its used form, bacitracin prevents it from being recycled for another round of delivery. Without this carrier, the bacterium cannot transport new cell wall components to where they are needed, and wall construction stops. This mechanism requires zinc as a cofactor.

Research Summary

Bacitracin has been in use since 1948, long before modern clinical trial standards were established, so its evidence base is largely historical rather than built on large randomised trials. Its effectiveness as a topical antibiotic for minor wounds is generally accepted, though there is growing debate in wound care about whether topical antibiotics provide meaningful benefit over simply keeping wounds moist with plain petroleum jelly. A notable concern is allergic contact dermatitis — skin allergy testing data suggests bacitracin is one of the more common contact allergens, particularly in people with chronic wounds. The injectable form carries a boxed warning for kidney toxicity. Research into next-generation bacitracin variants with activity against resistant bacteria (including vancomycin-resistant organisms) has shown early promise in laboratory studies.

Clinical Trials

PeptideTrace tracks 39 registered clinical trials for Bacitracin sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov.

NCT07388823N/ANot Yet Recruiting

Nailbed Repair for Patients With Nailbed Injuries

Stanford UniversityEndpoint: Oxford Nail ScoreCompletion: 2030-10-31
NCT06992453N/ANot Yet Recruiting

Multi-omics Dissection of Gut Microbiome Engraftment During FMT

Catholic University of the Sacred HeartEndpoint: Longitudinal Analysis of Host-Microbiome Interactions Driving Microbial EngraftmentCompletion: 2029-02-19
NCT05856994Phase IRecruiting

Clinical Assessment of Protopic® Ointment in Deep Partial-Thickness Burns

Vanderbilt University Medical CenterEndpoint: Time to complete wound healingCompletion: 2028-06-01
NCT06424704N/ANot Yet Recruiting

Chronic Suppurative Otitis Media Microbiology

Selcuk UniversityEndpoint: Microbiology of chronic suppurative otitis mediaCompletion: 2026-05-01
NCT06166290N/AUnknown

Comparing CO2 Laser and Electrosurgical Treatments for Perianal Condyloma

University of Illinois at ChicagoEndpoint: Recurrence of Anal CondylomaCompletion: 2026-04-01
View all 39 trials on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Regulatory Timeline

1971
Regulatory

FDA ORIG 1

1989
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 4

1995
Regulatory

FDA ORIG 1

1995
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 5

1995
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 6

1995
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 7

1995
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 8

1995
Regulatory

FDA ORIG 1

1995
Regulatory

FDA ORIG 1

1996
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 1

1996
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 9

1996
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 1

1996
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 1

1996
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 2

1997
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 2

1998
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 3

1998
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 4

1998
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 4

1998
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 2

1998
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 3

1998
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 6

1998
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 4

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 5

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 7

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 3

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 5

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 5

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 6

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 6

1999
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 8

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 11

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 7

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 7

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 9

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 8

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 8

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 12

2000
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 10

2001
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 9

2001
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 9

2001
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 13

2001
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 10

2001
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 10

2001
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 14

2002
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 11

2002
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 15

2002
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 18

2002
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 16

2002
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 10

2002
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 11

2002
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 17

2013
Regulatory

FDA SUPPL 12

2017
Regulatory

Health Canada Market Authorisation

Scientific Detail

Overview (Scientific)

Bacitracin is a branched cyclic dodecapeptide (12 AA) from Bacillus licheniformis. MW 1,422.71 Da (bacitracin A, 60-80%). Cyclic heptapeptide ring, linear pentapeptide tail, unique N-terminal thiazoline ring. Four D-amino acids. Applied topically 1-3x daily (OTC), ophthalmically q3-4h (Rx). IM injection for infants only: 900 units/kg/day. No meaningful systemic absorption from topical use.

Mechanism of Action (Scientific)

Targets undecaprenyl pyrophosphate (C55-PP), essential for peptidoglycan biosynthesis. Bacitracin, complexed with Zn2+ (1:1:1 ternary complex), sequesters C55-PP, preventing dephosphorylation back to C55-P by undecaprenyl pyrophosphatase. Zn2+ coordinates thiazoline nitrogen, Glu-4 carboxyl, and pyrophosphate head group. Halts lipid carrier recycling, blocking peptidoglycan synthesis and causing osmotic lysis.

Summary (Scientific)

Marketed as Baciguent (topical), BACiiM (injection); combinations: Neosporin, Polysporin. Approved July 29, 1948. Pre-modern approval. Meleney et al. (1949): 270 cases of IM bacitracin showing efficacy with nephrotoxicity. Triple antibiotic ointment effective for surface infections. Indications: topical skin infections (OTC); ocular infections (Rx); infantile staphylococcal pneumonia/empyema (IM, restricted).

Related Compounds

Vancomycin

Approved
Glycopeptide Antibiotic

Vancomycin is marketed as Vancocin and Firvanq (approved 1958, with oral solution Firvanq approved 2018). It is the standard treatment for serious MRSA infections (bloodstream infections, endocarditis, pneumonia, bone infections) and is first-line for severe C. difficile colitis. Vancomycin requires therapeutic drug monitoring — blood levels must be checked regularly to ensure the dose is effective without causing kidney damage or hearing loss. The rise of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) and occasional vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (VISA) strains represent ongoing challenges. Despite being nearly 70 years old, vancomycin remains irreplaceable for many serious infections, though newer alternatives like daptomycin and the lipoglycopeptides offer advantages in specific settings.

Zilucoplan

Approved
Complement C5 Inhibitor (Peptide)

Zilucoplan is marketed as Zilbrysq (approved October 2023) for anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody-positive generalised myasthenia gravis in adults. Administered as a daily subcutaneous self-injection. In the RAISE trial, zilucoplan showed statistically significant improvements in both activities of daily living and quantitative muscle strength scores compared to placebo, with improvements evident from week one. Its key differentiator from existing complement inhibitors (eculizumab, ravulizumab) is the self-injectable format — those alternatives require hospital-based intravenous infusions. As with all complement inhibitors, patients require meningococcal vaccination before starting treatment due to increased susceptibility to meningococcal infection.

Daptomycin

Approved
Lipopeptide Antibiotic

Daptomycin is marketed as Cubicin (approved September 2003). It is indicated for complicated skin and soft tissue infections and S. aureus bloodstream infections including right-sided endocarditis. Administered as a once-daily intravenous infusion. A key limitation is that daptomycin cannot be used for pneumonia — lung surfactant inactivates the drug. In the bacteraemia trial, daptomycin was non-inferior to vancomycin with significantly lower rates of kidney problems (11% versus 26%). Creatine kinase (CK) levels must be monitored during treatment, as daptomycin can cause muscle toxicity. Generics became available after patent expiry, significantly reducing cost.

Related Research

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions about your health.