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Efficacy of moist heat decontamination against various pathogens for the reuse of N95 respirators in the COVID-19 emergency
Ebru Oral; Keith K Wannomae; Dmitry Gil; Rachel L Connolly; Joseph Gardecki; Hui Min Leung; Orhun K Muratoglu; Amy Tsurumi; Laurence G Rahme; Tareq Jaber; Cassidy Collins; Amanda Budzilowicz; Julian Gjore.
Affiliation
  • Ebru Oral; Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
  • Keith K Wannomae; Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Dmitry Gil; Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
  • Rachel L Connolly; Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Joseph Gardecki; Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Hui Min Leung; Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Orhun K Muratoglu; Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
  • Amy Tsurumi; Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
  • Laurence G Rahme; Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
  • Tareq Jaber; Charles River Laboratories
  • Cassidy Collins; Charles River Laboratories
  • Amanda Budzilowicz; Charles River Laboratories
  • Julian Gjore; Charles River Laboratories
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-20100651
ABSTRACT
Decontamination of N95 respirators has become critical to alleviate PPE shortages for healthcare workers in the current COVID-19 emergency. The factors that are considered for the effective reuse of these masks are the fit, filter efficiency and decontamination/disinfection level both for SARS-CoV2, which is the causative virus for COVID-19, and for other organisms of concern in the hospital environment such as Staphylococcus aureus or Clostridium difficile. The efficacy of inactivation or eradication against various pathogens should be evaluated thoroughly to understand the level of afforded disinfection. Methods commonly used in the sterilization of medical devices such as ionizing radiation, vaporized hydrogen peroxide, and ethylene oxide can provide a high level of disinfection, defined as a 6 log10 reduction, against bacterial spores, considered the most resistant microorganisms. CDC guidance on the decontamination and reuse of N95s also includes the use of moist heat (60{degrees}C, 80% relative humidity, 15-30 min) as a possible recommendation based on literature showing preservation of fit efficiency and inactivation of H1N1 on spiked masks. Here, we explored the efficacy of using moist heat under these conditions as a decontamination method for an N95 respirator (3M 1860S, St. Paul, MN) against various pathogens with different resistance; enveloped RNA viruses, Gram (+/-) bacteria, and non-enveloped viruses.
License
cc_by_nc_nd
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Experimental_studies Language: English Year: 2020 Document type: Preprint
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Experimental_studies Language: English Year: 2020 Document type: Preprint
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