Department of Infectious and Parasitic Diseases, Veterinary Virology and Animal Viral Diseases, FARAH Research Centre, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Liège University, Liège, Belgium.
Centexbel Textile Research Centre, Grace-Hollogne, Belgium.
PLoS One. 2021 May 19;16(5):e0251872. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251872. eCollection 2021.
As the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic accelerates, the supply of personal protective equipment remains under strain. To combat shortages, re-use of surgical masks and filtering facepiece respirators has been recommended. Prior decontamination is paramount to the re-use of these typically single-use only items and, without compromising their integrity, must guarantee inactivation of SARS-CoV-2 and other contaminating pathogens.
We provide information on the effect of time-dependent passive decontamination (infectivity loss over time during room temperature storage in a breathable bag) and evaluate inactivation of a SARS-CoV-2 surrogate and a non-enveloped model virus as well as mask and respirator integrity following active multiple-cycle vaporised hydrogen peroxide (VHP), ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI), and dry heat (DH) decontamination.
Masks and respirators, inoculated with infectious porcine respiratory coronavirus or murine norovirus, were submitted to passive decontamination or single or multiple active decontamination cycles; viruses were recovered from sample materials and viral titres were measured via TCID50 assay. In parallel, filtration efficiency tests and breathability tests were performed according to EN standard 14683 and NIOSH regulations.
Infectious porcine respiratory coronavirus and murine norovirus remained detectable on masks and respirators up to five and seven days of passive decontamination. Single and multiple cycles of VHP-, UVGI-, and DH were shown to not adversely affect bacterial filtration efficiency of masks. Single- and multiple UVGI did not adversely affect respirator filtration efficiency, while VHP and DH induced a decrease in filtration efficiency after one or three decontamination cycles. Multiple cycles of VHP-, UVGI-, and DH slightly decreased airflow resistance of masks but did not adversely affect respirator breathability. VHP and UVGI efficiently inactivated both viruses after five, DH after three, decontamination cycles, permitting demonstration of a loss of infectivity by more than three orders of magnitude. This multi-disciplinal approach provides important information on how often a given PPE item may be safely reused.
随着 SARS-CoV-2 大流行的加速,个人防护设备的供应仍然紧张。为了应对短缺,建议重复使用外科口罩和过滤式面罩呼吸器。在重复使用这些通常只能使用一次的物品之前,进行预先消毒至关重要,并且在不损害其完整性的前提下,必须保证 SARS-CoV-2 和其他污染病原体的灭活。
我们提供了关于时间依赖性被动消毒(在透气袋中室温储存期间随时间推移的传染性丧失)效果的信息,并评估了 SARS-CoV-2 替代物和非包膜模型病毒的灭活情况,以及经过多次循环汽化过氧化氢(VHP)、紫外线杀菌照射(UVGI)和干热(DH)消毒后口罩和呼吸器的完整性。
将接种了传染性猪呼吸道冠状病毒或鼠诺如病毒的口罩和呼吸器进行被动消毒或单次或多次主动消毒循环;从样品材料中回收病毒,并通过 TCID50 测定法测量病毒滴度。同时,根据 EN 标准 14683 和 NIOSH 规定进行过滤效率测试和透气性测试。
在被动消毒的五到七天内,口罩和呼吸器上仍然可以检测到传染性猪呼吸道冠状病毒和鼠诺如病毒。单次和多次 VHP、UVGI 和 DH 循环均未对口罩的细菌过滤效率产生不利影响。单次和多次 UVGI 未对呼吸器的过滤效率产生不利影响,而 VHP 和 DH 在一个或三个消毒循环后降低了过滤效率。VHP、UVGI 和 DH 的多次循环略微增加了口罩的气流阻力,但未对呼吸器的透气性产生不利影响。VHP 和 UVGI 在五个、DH 在三个消毒循环后可有效灭活两种病毒,证明其传染性降低了三个数量级以上。这种多学科方法提供了有关给定 PPE 物品可安全重复使用的频率的重要信息。