“…In this milieu, surface roughness in terms of nano-topography is the most critical parameter to attain antifouling or bactericidal properties, and surface nanoroughness ranging from 30 nm to 1 μm efficiently reduces the attachment of bacteria ( Medilanski et al., 2002 ; Fröjd et al., 2011 ; Bazaka et al., 2015 ). Various nano or micro topographical modifications for next-generation medical device surfaces have been explored, including micro/nanopores, micro ridges, micro/nanopillars, nanocolumns, nanocolumns, nanowires, nanorings, nanospinules or hairs, and nano spikes/needles ( Reddy et al., 2011 ; Tripathy et al., 2017 ; Yang et al., 2022 ). The interaction between the substrate topographies and bacteria leads to bacterial killing or preventing bacterial adherence and circumvents biofilm formation, mitigating AMR ( Feng et al., 2015 ; Khalid et al., 2020 ).…”