Microbiome-Driven Bioactives for Chronic Wound Repair: Microbial Metabolites, Host–Microbe Mechanisms and Paths to Clinical Translation
Juliana Garcia, Jani Silva, Maria José Alves, Irene GouvinhasChronic wounds represent a substantial and growing clinical burden, yet durable healing remains difficult to achieve in a large proportion of patients. The skin microbiome plays a central role in this challenge: in healthy tissue, resident microorganisms support barrier integrity and calibrate immune responses, whereas in chronic wounds, community disruption—often combined with persistent biofilm formation—drives non-resolving inflammation, impairs re-epithelialisation, and increases antimicrobial tolerance. As antibiotic resistance escalates, these features strengthen the rationale for microbiome-directed strategies that target wound ecology while reducing reliance on conventional antimicrobials. Current evidence is still dominated by mechanistic and preclinical studies, with only early clinical signals for selected approaches; therefore, next-generation probiotics, including Lactiplantibacillus/Lactobacillus spp., as well as defined prebiotic and postbiotic formulations, should be interpreted as promising adjuncts rather than clinically established therapies. Causal mechanisms, optimal formulations, reproducibility, and patient-level determinants of response remain insufficiently defined, representing a critical knowledge gap that limits translation. Here, we synthesise current evidence linking microbial ecology to key wound-healing pathways and propose a precision framework that integrates metagenomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics, and spatial profiling to map host–microbe interactions, identify predictive biomarkers, and guide stratified therapy. We further highlight combinatorial approaches pairing ecological engineering with biofilm-disruptive materials and immune-modulatory molecules. Realising the potential of these interventions will require mechanism-resolved clinical trials, standardised outcome frameworks, and patient stratification tools—advances that could improve chronic wound management while reducing selective pressure for antimicrobial resistance.