Title: Reprocessing Flexible Endoscopes: What
1Reprocessing Flexible Endoscopes Whats New
- William A. Rutala, Ph.D., M.P.H.
- Director, Hospital Epidemiology, Occupational
Health and Safety Program, UNC Health Care
Professor of Medicine, Director, Statewide
Program for Infection Control and Epidemiology,
University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel
Hill, NC, USA
2DISCLOSURES
- Consultation and Honoraria
- ASP (Advanced Sterilization Products), Clorox
- Honoraria
- 3M
- Grants
- CDC, CMS
- No funds from Medivator, session sponsor
3Reprocessing Flexible EndoscopesObjectives
- Risks associated with reprocessing flexible
endoscopes - Causes of contamination and infection
- Gaps in current reprocessing standards
- Establish scientific rationale and evidence
requirements for enhancing safe practices
4Reprocessing Flexible EndoscopesTopics
- Risks associated with reprocessing flexible
endoscopes - Audits-cleaning (ATP) and microbiological
sampling - Outbreaks when no reprocessing deficiencies
identified - Patient notification after failure to follow
guidelines - Endoscopes reprocessed if unused at 5 days
- Human papilloma virus
- C. difficile spores
- Biofilms
- Unsafe injection practices
- Reprocessing steps performed in compliance with
guidelines - AERs
- Newer high-level disinfectants
- Fecal transplants
5Reprocessing Flexible EndoscopesObjectives
- Risks associated with reprocessing flexible
endoscopes - Margin of safety and evidence of transmission,
patient notification - Causes of contamination and infection
- Gaps in current reprocessing standards
- Establish scientific rationale and evidence
requirements for enhancing safe practices
6ENDOSCOPE REPROCESSING
7Disinfection and Sterilization
- EH Spaulding believed that how an object will be
disinfected depended on the objects intended
use. - CRITICAL - objects which enter normally sterile
tissue or the vascular system or through which
blood flows should be sterile. - SEMICRITICAL - objects that touch mucous
membranes or skin that is not intact require a
disinfection process (high-level disinfection
HLD) that kills all microorganisms but high
numbers of bacterial spores. - NONCRITICAL -objects that touch only intact skin
require low-level disinfection .
8ENDOSCOPES
- Widely used diagnostic and therapeutic procedure
(11-22 million GI procedures annually in the US) - GI endoscope contamination during use (109 in/105
out) - Semicritical items require high-level
disinfection minimally - Inappropriate cleaning and disinfection has lead
to cross-transmission - In the inanimate environment, although the
incidence remains very low, endoscopes represent
a significant risk of disease transmission
9Endoscope Reprocessing Current Status of
Cleaning and Disinfection
- Guidelines
- Multi-Society Guideline, 12 professional
organizations, 2011 - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2008
- Society of Gastroenterology Nurses and
Associates, 2010 - AAMI Technical Information Report, Endoscope
Reprocessing, In preparation - Food and Drug Administration, 2009
- Endoscope Reprocessing, Health Canada, 2010
- Association for Professional in Infection Control
and Epidemiology, 2000
10MULTISOCIETY GUIDELINE ON REPROCESSING GI
ENDOSCOPES, 2011Petersen et al. ICHE.
201132527
11ENDOSCOPE REPROCESSINGMulti-Society Guideline on
Endoscope Reprocessing, 2011
- PRECLEAN-point-of-use (bedside) remove debris by
wiping exterior and aspiration of detergent
through air/water and biopsy channels leak test - CLEAN-mechanically cleaned with water and
enzymatic cleaner - HLD/STERILIZE-immerse scope and perfuse
HLD/sterilant through all channels for exposure
time (gt2 glut at 20m at 20oC). If AER used,
review model-specific reprocessing protocols from
both the endoscope and AER manufacturer - RINSE-scope and channels rinsed with sterile
water, filtered water, or tap water. Flush
channels with alcohol and dry - DRY-use forced air to dry insertion tube and
channels - STORE-hang in vertical position to facilitate
drying stored in a manner to protect from
contamination
12Disinfection and Sterilization
- EH Spaulding believed that how an object will be
disinfected depended on the objects intended
use. - CRITICAL - objects which enter normally sterile
tissue or the vascular system or through which
blood flows should be sterile. - SEMICRITICAL - objects that touch mucous
membranes or skin that is not intact require a
disinfection process (high-level disinfection
HLD) that kills all microorganisms but high
numbers of bacterial spores. - NONCRITICAL -objects that touch only intact skin
require low-level disinfection .
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14Critical ItemsSterilization-Huge Margin of Safety
- Huge margin of safety associated with
sterilization of critical items - Surgical instrument contaminated with lt100
microorganisms - Decontamination by washer-disinfector eliminates
gt5 logs (or 100,000 fold reduction) - Sterilization processes inactivate 12 logs of
spores (or 1,000,000,000,000 spores) - Unlikely sterilized instrument will transmit
infection when compliant with recommendations
15FEATURES OF ENDOSCOPES THAT PREDISPOSE TO
DISINFECTION FAILURES
- Require low temperature disinfection
- Long narrow lumens
- Right angle turns
- Blind lumens
- May be heavily contaminated with pathogens, 109
- Cleaning (4-6 log10 reduction) and HLD (4-6 log10
reduction) essential for patient safe instrument
16GI EndoscopesHLD-Narrow Margin of Safety
- Narrow margin of safety associated with
high-level disinfection of semicritical items - Instrument contaminated with 1,000,000,000
microorganisms - Cleaning eliminates 5 logs (or 100,000 fold
reduction) - High-level disinfection process inactivates 5
logs of microbes (100,000 fold) - Likely exposed to previous patients pathogens if
reprocessing protocol is not followed precisely
17Transmission of Infection by EndoscopyKovaleva
et al. Clin Microbiol Rev 2013. 26231-254
Scope Outbreaks Micro (primary) Pts Contaminated Pts Infected Cause (primary)
Upper GI 19 Pa, H. pylori, Salmonella 169 56 Cleaning/Dis-infection (C/D)
Sigmoid/Colonoscopy 5 Salmonella, HCV 14 6 Cleaning/Dis-infection
ERCP 23 Pa 152 89 C/D, water bottle, AER
Bronchoscopy 51 Pa, Mtb, Mycobacteria 778 98 C/D, AER, water
Totals 98 1113 249
Based on outbreak data, if eliminated
deficiencies associated with cleaning,
disinfection, AER , contaminated water and drying
would eliminate about 85 of the outbreaks.
18TRANSMISSION OF INFECTION
- Gastrointestinal endoscopy
- gt150 infections transmitted
- Salmonella sp. and P. aeruginosa
- Clinical spectrum ranged from colonization to
death (4) - Bronchoscopy
- 100 infections transmitted
- M. tuberculosis, atypical Mycobacteria, P.
aeruginosa - Endemic transmission may go unrecognized (e.g.,
inadequate surveillance, low frequency,
asymptomatic infections) - Kovaleva et al. Clin Microbiol Rev 2013.
26231-254
19Endoscope Reprocessing, Worldwide
- Worldwide, endoscopy reprocessing varies greatly
- India, of 133 endoscopy centers, only 1/3
performed even a minimum disinfection (1 glut
for 2 min) - Brazil, a high standard occur only
exceptionally - Western Europe, gt30 did not adequately disinfect
- Japan, found exceedingly poor disinfection
protocols - US, 25 of endoscopes revealed gt100,000 bacteria
- Schembre DB. Gastroint Endoscopy 200010215
20Nosocomial Infections via GI Endoscopes
- Infections traced to deficient practices
- Inadequate cleaning (clean all channels)
- Inappropriate/ineffective disinfection (time
exposure, perfuse channels, test concentration,
ineffective disinfectant, inappropriate
disinfectant) - Failure to follow recommended disinfection
practices (tapwater rinse) - Flaws and complexity in design of endoscopes or
AERs
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24Reprocessing Flexible EndoscopesObjectives
- Risks associated with reprocessing flexible
endoscopes - Causes of contamination and infection
- Complex device/complex reprocessing
- Gaps in current reprocessing standards
- Establish scientific rationale and evidence
requirements for enhancing safe practices
25FEATURES OF ENDOSCOPES THAT PREDISPOSE TO
DISINFECTION FAILURES
- Require low temperature disinfection
- Long narrow lumens
- Right angle turns
- Blind lumens
- May be heavily contaminated with pathogens, 109
- Cleaning (4-6 log10 reduction) and HLD (4-6 log10
reduction) essential for patient safe instrument
26Multi-Society Guideline for Reprocessing Flexible
Gastrointestinal Endoscopes, 2011
- Transmission categorized as
- Non-endoscopic and related to care of intravenous
lines and administration of anesthesia or other
medications - Multidose vials
- Reuse of needles and syringes
- Intravenous sedation tubing
- Endoscopic and related to endoscope and
accessories - Failure to sterilize biopsy forceps between
patients - Lapses in reprocessing tubing used in channel
irrigation
27HCV from Unsafe Injection Practices at an
Endoscopy Clinic in Las Vegas, 2007-2008Fischer
et al. Clin Infect Dis. 201051 267
- Background-in January 2008, 3 persons with acute
HCV underwent endoscopy at a single facility in
Nevada. - Method-reviewed clinical and laboratory data
- Results- 5 additional cases of HCV were
identified and quasispecies analysis identified
two clusters. 7/38 (17) who followed source
patient were HCV infected. Reuse of syringes on
single patients with use of single-use propofol
vials for multiple patients was observed. - Conclusion- patient-to-patient transmission of
HCV resulted from contamination of single-use
medication vials that were used for multiple
patients during anesthesia administration. The
resulting notification of gt50,000 persons was the
largest of its kind in US health care.
28Unsafe Injection PracticesHCV patient-new
needle, same syringe, contaminated vial propofol
29SAFE INJECTION PRACTICES
30Endoscope Reprocessing MethodsOfstead ,
Wetzler, Snyder, Horton, Gastro Nursing 2010
33204
31Endoscope Reprocessing MethodsOfstead ,
Wetzler, Snyder, Horton, Gastro Nursing 2010
33204
Performed all 12 steps with only 1.4 of
endoscopes using manual versus 75.4 of those
processed using AER
32Automated Endoscope Reprocessors
33Automated Endoscope Reprocessors (AER)
- Manual cleaning of endoscopes is prone to error.
AERs can enhance efficiency and reliability of
HLD by replacing some manual reprocessing steps - AER Advantages automate and standardize
reprocessing steps, reduce personnel exposure to
chemicals, filtered tap water, reduce likelihood
that essential steps will be skipped - AER Disadvantages failure of AERs linked to
outbreaks, may not eliminate precleaning BMC
Infect Dis 201010200 - Problems incompatible AER (side-viewing
duodenoscope) biofilm buildup contaminated AER
inadequate channel connectors used wrong set-up
or connector MMWR 199948557 - Must ensure exposure of internal surfaces with
HLD/sterilant
34Automated Endoscope ReprocessorsGastro Endoscopy
201072675
- All AERs have disinfection and rinsing cycles
some detergent cleaning alcohol flush and/or
forced-air drying - Additional features may include variable cycle
times printed documentation HLD vapor recovery
systems heating automated leak testing
automated detection of channel obstruction, MEC - Not all AERs compatible with all HLDs or
endoscopes some models designed with specific
HLDs - Some AERs consume and dispose of HLD and other
reuse HLD - Some AERs have an FDA-cleared cleaning claim
(eliminates soil and microbes equivalent to
optimal manual cleaning-lt6.4µg/cm2 protein)
35Automated Endoscope Reprocessors with Cleaning
Claim (requires procedure room pre-cleaning)
- Medivator Advantage Plus Endoscope Reprocessing
System
- Evo-Tech (eliminates soil and microbes equivalent
to optimal manual cleaning. BMC ID 201010200)
36ENDOSCOPE REPROCESSING CHALLENGESNDM-Producing
E. coli Associated ERCPMMWR 2014621051
NDM-producing E.coli recovered from elevator
channel
37ENDOSCOPE REPROCESSING CHALLENGESNDM-Producing
E. coli Associated ERCPMMWR 2014621051
- March-July 2013, 9 patients with cultures for New
Delhi Metallo-ß-Lactamase producing E. coli
associated with ERCP - History of undergoing ERCP strongly associated
with cases - NDM-producing E.coli recovered from elevator
channel - No lapses in endoscope reprocessing identified
- Hospital changed from automated HLD to ETO
sterilization - Due to either failure of personnel to complete
required process every time or intrinsic problems
with these scopes (not altered reprocessing)
38ENDOSCOPE REPROCESSING CHALLENGESNDM-Producing
E. coli Associated ERCPMMWR 2014621051
- Recommendations
- Education/adherence monitoring
- Certification/competency testing of reprocessing
staff - Enforcement of best practices-preventive
maintenance schedule - Improved definition of the scope of the issue and
contributing factors - Development of innovative approaches to improve
and assess the process - Systematic assessment of the ability of
AERs/technicians to clean/disinfect scopes - Disinfection evaluation testing that relates to
risk of pathogen transmission
39DECREASING ORDER OF RESISTANCE OF MICROORGANISMS
TO DISINFECTANTS/STERILANTS
Most Resistant
- Prions
- Spores (C. difficile)
- Mycobacteria
- Non-Enveloped Viruses (norovirus,
polio, HPV, parvo) - Fungi
- Bacteria (MRSA, VRE, Acinetobacter)
- Enveloped Viruses
Most Susceptible
40ENDOSCOPE REPROCESSING CHALLENGESSusceptibility
of Human PapillomavirusJ Meyers et al. J
Antimicrob Chemother, Epub Feb 2014
- High-level disinfectants no effect on HPV
- Finding inconsistent with other small,
non-enveloped viruses such as polio and
parvovirus - Further investigation warranted test methods
unclear organic matter comparison virus - Use HLD consistent with FDA-cleared instructions
(not altered reprocessing)
41Monitoring Endoscope Cleaning
42Endoscope Cleaning
- Endoscope must be cleaned using water with
detergents or enzymatic cleaners before
processing. - Cleaning reduces the bioburden and removes
foreign material (organic residue and inorganic
salts) that interferes with the HLD or
sterilization process. - Cleaning and decontamination should be done as
soon as possible after the items have been used
as soiled materials become dried onto the
endoscopes.
43Bacterial Bioburden Associated with Endoscopes
Gastroscope, log10 CFU Colonoscope, log10 CFU
After procedure 6.7 8.5 Gastro Nursing 19982263
6.8 8.5 Am J Inf Cont 199927392
9.8 Gastro Endosc 199748137
After cleaning 2.0 2.3
4.8 4.3
5.1
44Viral Bioburden from Endoscopes Used with AIDS
Patients Hanson et al. Lancet 1989286 Hanson
et al. Thorax 199146410
Dirty Cleaned Disinfected
Gastroscopes HIV (PCR) 7/20 0/20 0/20
HBsAg 1/20 0/20 0/7
Bronchoscopes HIV (cDNA) 7/7 0/7 0/7
HBsAg 1/10 0/10 0/10
45IS THERE A STANDARD TO DEFINE WHEN A DEVICE IS
CLEAN?
- There is currently no standard to define when a
device is clean, cleanliness controlled by
visual - Potential methods level of detectable bacteria
protein (6µg/cm2) endotoxin ATP lipid - This is due in part to the fact that no
universally accepted test soils to evaluate
cleaning efficiency and no standard procedure for
measuring cleaning efficiency
46Audit Manual Cleaning of EndoscopesEstablishing
Benchmarks
- Alfa et al. Am J Infect Control 201240860.
Rapid Use Scope Test detects organic residuals
protein (lt6.4µg/cm2) hemoglobin (lt2.2.µg/cm2)
and carbohydrate (lt1.2µg/cm2) - Alfa et al. Am J Infect Control 201341245-248.
If lt200 RLUs of ATP, the protein, hemoglobin and
bioburden (lt4-log10 CFU/cm2 gt106 per scope)
were achieved. - Alfa et al. Am J Infect Control 201442e1-e5.
200 RLU adequate for ATP.
47Audit Manual Cleaning of Endoscopes
- Issues for consideration
- What is the clinical importance of lt6.4µg/cm2 for
protein and lt4 log10 CFU/cm2 bioburden that is,
has it been related epidemiologically or
clinically to decrease or increase risk of
infection? - ATP may be related to markers (e.g., protein) but
markers may have no relationship to
microbes/disease and providing patient safe
instrument. - Ideally, validation of benchmarks should include
correlation with patients clinical outcome. The
CDC has suggested that sampling be done when
there are epidemiological data that demonstrate
risk (e.g., endotoxin testing and microbial
testing of water used in dialysis correlated to
increased risk of pyrogenic reactions in patient).
48ATP and Microbial ContaminationRutala, Gergen,
Weber. Unpublished 2014
ATP no correlation to microbes
Pathogen Microbial Load ATP
C. difficile 106 lt100
Acinetobacter baumannii 104 lt100
MRSA 104 lt100
49C. difficile A GROWING THREAT
50C. difficile spores
51DECREASING ORDER OF RESISTANCE OF MICROORGANISMS
TO DISINFECTANTS/STERILANTS
Most Resistant
- Prions
- Spores (C. difficile)
- Mycobacteria
- Non-Enveloped Viruses (norovirus)
- Fungi
- Bacteria (MRSA, VRE, Acinetobacter)
- Enveloped Viruses
Most Susceptible
52C. difficile MICROBIOLOGY AND EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Gram-positive bacillus Strict anaerobe,
spore-former - Colonizes human GI tract
- Increasing prevalence and incidence
- New epidemic strain that hyper-produces toxins A
and B - Causes virtually all cases of antibiotic-associate
d pseudomembranous colitis. - Introduction of CDI from the community into
hospitals - High morbidity and mortality in elderly
- Inability to effectively treat fulminant CDI
- Absence of a treatment that will prevent
recurrence of CDI
53Disinfectants and AntisepticsC. difficile spores
at 10 and 20 min, Rutala et al, 2006
- 4 log10 reduction (3 C. difficile strains
including BI-9) - Chlorine, 110, 6,000 ppm chlorine (but not
150, 1,200 ppm) - Chlorine, 1,910 ppm chlorine
- Chlorine, 25,000 ppm chlorine
- 0.20 peracetic acid
- 2.4 glutaraldehyde
- 2.65 glutaraldehyde
- 3.4 glutaraldehyde and 26 alcohol
54Control MeasuresC. difficile
- No reports document the transmission of C.
difficile by a GI endoscope. - Current guidelines should be effective in
preventing transmission via GI endoscope (i.e.,
HLD such as glutaraldehyde and peracetic acid
reliably kills C. difficile spores using normal
exposure times)
55BIOFILMSPajkos, Vickery, Cossart. J Hosp Infect
200458224
56BIOFILMS(Multi-Layered Bacteria Plus
Exopolysaccharides That Cement Cell to Surface
Develop in Wet Environments)
57BIOFILMS(Multi-Layered Bacteria Plus
Exopolysaccharides That Cement Cell to Surface
Develop in Wet Environments)
58BIOFILMS
- Bacteria residing within biofilms are many times
more resistant to chemical inactivation than
bacteria is suspension - Does formation of biofilms within endoscopic
channels contribute to failure of decontamination
process? Not known - Could be a reason for failure of adequate HLD
processes but if reprocessing performed promptly
after use and endoscope dry the opportunity for
biofilm formation is minimal
59Reprocessing Flexible EndoscopesObjectives
- Risks associated with reprocessing flexible
endoscopes - Causes of contamination and infection
- Gaps in current reprocessing standards
- Establish scientific rationale and evidence
requirements for enhancing safe practices - New HLDs, TJC, AERs, reprocessing if unused for
5-7 days, microbiologic sampling, fecal
transplants
60High-Level Disinfection of Semicritical Objects
- Exposure Time gt 8m-45m (US), 20oC
- Germicide
Concentration_____ - Glutaraldehyde
gt 2.0 - Ortho-phthalaldehyde
0.55 - Hydrogen peroxide
7.5 - Hydrogen peroxide and peracetic acid
1.0/0.08 - Hydrogen peroxide and peracetic acid
7.5/0.23 - Hypochlorite (free chlorine)
650-675 ppm - Accelerated hydrogen peroxide 2.0
- Peracetic acid 0.2
- Glut and isopropanol 3.4/26
- Glut and phenol/phenate
1.21/1.93___ - May cause cosmetic and functional damage
efficacy not verified
61ResertTM HLD
- High Level Disinfectant - Chemosterilant
- 2 hydrogen peroxide, in formulation
- pH stabilizers
- Chelating agents
- Corrosion inhibitors
- Efficacy (claims need verification)
- Sporicidal, virucidal, bactericidal,
tuberculocidal, fungicidal - HLD 8 mins at 20oC
- Odorless, non-staining, ready-to-use
- No special shipping or venting requirements
- Manual or automated applications
- 12-month shelf life, 21 days reuse
- Material compatibility/organic material
resistance (Fe, Cu)?
The Accelerated Hydrogen Peroxide technology and
logo are the property of Virox Technologies, Inc.
Modified from G MacDonald. AJIC 200634571
62ACCREDITING AGENCIESThe Joint Commission/CMS
- Recommendations for Improvement must be based on
evidence-based guidelines - 7-day endoscope reprocessing (challenged, removed
from report) - Storage
- Handling disinfected endoscopes with clean hands
versus gloves (challenged, removed from report)
63MULTISOCIETY GUIDELINE ON REPROCESSING GI
ENDOSCOPES, 2011Petersen et al. ICHE.
201132527
64Multi-Society Guideline for Reprocessing Flexible
Gastrointestinal Endoscopes, 2011
- Unresolved Issues
- Interval of storage after which endoscopes should
be reprocessed before use - Data suggest that contamination during storage
for intervals of 7-14 days is negligible,
unassociated with duration, occurs on exterior of
instruments and involves only common skin
organisms - Data are insufficient to proffer a maximal outer
duration for use of appropriately cleaned,
reprocessed, dried and stored endoscopes - Without full data reprocessing within this
interval may be advisable for certain situations
(endoscope entry to otherwise sterile regions
such as biliary tree, pancreas)
65Endoscopes Reprocessed If Unused 5 DaysAORN, 2010
Provided all channels thoroughly reprocessed and
dried, reuse within 10-14 appears safe. Data are
insufficient to offer maximum duration for use.
Investigator Shelf Life Contamination Rate Recommendation
Osborne, Endoscopy 2007 18.8h median 15.5 CONS, Micrococcus, Bacillus Environmental /process contamination
Rejchrt, Gastro Endosc 2004 5 days 3.0 (4/135), skin bacteria (CONS, diphteroids) Reprocessing before use not necessary
Vergis, Endoscopy 2007 7 days 8.6 (6/70), all CONS Reprocessing not necessary for at least 7d
Riley, GI Nursing, 2002 24,168h 50 (5/10), lt3 CFU CONS, S. aureus, P. aeurginosa, Micrococcus Left for up to 1 week
66Multi-Society Guideline for Reprocessing Flexible
Gastrointestinal Endoscopes, 2011
- Unresolved Issues
- Optimal frequencies for replacement of clean
water bottles and tubing for insufflation of air
and lens wash water, and waste vacuum canisters
and suction tubing - Concern related to potential for backflow from a
soiled endoscope against the direction of forced
fluid and air passage into clean air/water source
or from tubing/canister against a vacuum into
clean instruments - Microbiologic surveillance testing after
reprocessing - Detection of non-environmental pathogens
indicator of faulty reprocessing equipment,
inadequate solution, or failed human process
67Audit Manual Cleaning of EndoscopesEstablishing
Benchmarks
- Lack of consensus regarding the clinical value of
routine microbiological monitoring of endoscopes.
We perform to assess the efficacy of
reprocessing. - Alfa et al. Am J Infect Control 201240233.
Recommends a bioburden residual of lt100 CFU/ml. - Beilenhoff et al. Endoscopy 200739 175.
ESGE-ESGENA allows bioburden count of lt20 CFU/
channel. - Heeg et al. J Hosp Infect 20045623.
Contamination should not exceed 1 CFU/ml. Certain
organisms should not be detected in any amount
(e.g., P. aeruginosa, E. coli, S. aureus)
68Fecal Transplants for Refractory C. difficile
Infection
- Criteria for eligibility -failed standard
therapy, no contraindication to colonoscopy,
confirmed C. difficile toxin positive, etc - Self-identified donor-donor will respond to
eligibility questions no GI cancer, no metabolic
disease, no prior use of illicit drugs, etc - Donor Testing-Stool-C. difficile toxin, OP,
bacterial pathogen panel (Salmonella, Shigella,
Giardia, norovirus, etc). Serum-RPR, HIV-1,
HIV-2, HCV Ab, CMV viral load, HAV IgM and IgG,
HBsAg, liver tests, etc - Stool preparation-fresh sample into 1 liter
sterile bottle, 500ml saline added, vigorously
shaking to liquefy, solid pieces removed with
sterile gauze so sample is liquid, liquid stool
drawn up into 7 sterile 50ml syringes, injected
into terminal ileum, cecum, ascending colon,
traverse colon, descending colon, sigmoid colon.
Colonoscope reprocessed by HLD.
69Reprocessing Flexible EndoscopesObjectives
- Risks associated with reprocessing flexible
endoscopes - Causes of contamination and infection
- Gaps in current reprocessing standards
- Establish scientific rationale and evidence
requirements for enhancing safe practices
70Conclusions
- Endoscopes represent a nosocomial hazard. Narrow
margin of safety associated with high-level
disinfection of semicritical items. Guidelines
must be strictly followed. - AERs can enhance efficiency and reliability of
HLD of endoscopes by replacing some manual
reprocessing steps and reducing the likelihood
that essential steps are not skipped - Urgent need to better understand the gaps in
endoscope reprocessing-CRE, C. difficile spores,
HPV, biofilms, etc. Industry must support
research to answer questions. - Data are insufficient to recommend ATP monitoring
- Data suggest that contamination during storage
for 7-14 days is negligible.
71THANK YOU!www.disinfectionandsterilization.org
72Endoscopes Delayed Reprocessing and Drying
- Delayed Reprocessing (GI Endoscopy 201173853)
- Reprocess immediately after use do not allow to
sit idle and soiled for hours before being
processed. If precleaning not initiated within an
hour, soak in detergent before cleaning. - Endoscope Drying (J Hosp Infect 20086859)
- Microbial contamination lower when stored in
drying and storage cabinet.