Litcius/Paper detail

Comparison of two endoscope channel cleaning approaches to remove cyclic build-up biofilm

Lia Moshkanbaryans, Vatsal Shah, Liying Tan, Michael Jones, Karen Vickery, Michelle J. Alfa, Jon Burdach

2024Journal of Hospital Infection10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Biofilm contributes significantly to bacterial persistence in endoscope channels. Enhanced cleaning methods capable of removing biofilm from all endoscope channels are required to decrease infection risk to patients. This head-to-head study compared cyclic build-up biofilm removal of an automated endoscope channel cleaner (AECC) with standard manual cleaning according to instructions for use (IFU) in polytetrafluorethylene channels. METHODS: ). RESULTS: The automated cleaner significantly outperformed manual cleaning for all markers assessed (protein, total organic carbon, viable bacteria) in 1.4-mm and 3.7-mm channels representing air/water/auxiliary and suction/biopsy channels, respectively. Manual cleaning failed to remove biofilm from the air/water and auxiliary channels. According to the IFU, these channels are not brushed, suggesting a potential root cause for a portion of the numerous endoscopy-associated infections reported in the literature. CONCLUSION: AECC shows potential to deliver enhanced cleaning over current practice to all endoscope channels and may thereby address infection risk.

Topics & Concepts

BiofilmEndoscopeChannel (broadcasting)Computer scienceBiomedical engineeringEngineering drawingArtificial intelligenceMedicineEngineeringGeologySurgeryComputer networkBacteriaPaleontologyMedical Device Sterilization and DisinfectionNosocomial Infections in ICUInfection Control in Healthcare