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Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether transmission of blood-borne pathogens (BBPs) (hepatitis B virus [HBV], hepatitis C virus [HCV] and HIV) occurred as a result of endoscopy reprocessing failures identified during an inspection of a nonhospital endoscopy clinic in 2011. METHODS: The present analysis was...

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Autores principales: Willmore, Jacqueline, Ellis, Edward, Etches, Vera, Labrecque, Lise, Osiowy, Carla, Andonov, Anton, McDermaid, Cameron, Majury, Anna, Achonu, Camille, Maher, Maurica, MacLean, Brenda, Levy, Isra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pulsus Group Inc 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4419818/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26015789
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author Willmore, Jacqueline
Ellis, Edward
Etches, Vera
Labrecque, Lise
Osiowy, Carla
Andonov, Anton
McDermaid, Cameron
Majury, Anna
Achonu, Camille
Maher, Maurica
MacLean, Brenda
Levy, Isra
author_facet Willmore, Jacqueline
Ellis, Edward
Etches, Vera
Labrecque, Lise
Osiowy, Carla
Andonov, Anton
McDermaid, Cameron
Majury, Anna
Achonu, Camille
Maher, Maurica
MacLean, Brenda
Levy, Isra
author_sort Willmore, Jacqueline
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To determine whether transmission of blood-borne pathogens (BBPs) (hepatitis B virus [HBV], hepatitis C virus [HCV] and HIV) occurred as a result of endoscopy reprocessing failures identified during an inspection of a nonhospital endoscopy clinic in 2011. METHODS: The present analysis was a retrospective cohort study. Registered notification letters were mailed to 6992 patients who underwent endoscopy from 2002 to 2011 at one Canadian nonhospital endoscopy clinic, informing them of the infection control lapse and offering BBP testing. Multimedia communications and a telephone line supplemented notification. A retrospective study of patients with BBPs was performed with viral genetic testing and risk factor assessment for eligible patients. Risk for infection among patients whose procedure was within seven days of a known positive patient was compared with those whose procedure was performed more than seven days after a known postive patient. The seven-day period was selected as the period most likely to present a risk for transmission based on the documented cleaning procedures at the clinic and the available literature on virus survival. RESULTS: Ninety-five percent (6628 of 6992) of patients/estates were contacted and 5042 of 6728 (75%) living patients completed BBP testing. Three were newly diagnosed with HBV and 14 with HCV. Twenty-three and 48 tested positive for previously known HBV or HCV, respectively, 367 were immune to HBV due to natural infection and one was immune to HBV due to immunization. None tested positive for HIV. Sequencing did not reveal any relationships among the 46 unique case patients with viral genetic test results available. Ninety-three percent of patients reported alternative risk factors for BBP. An increased risk for infection among those who underwent a procedure within seven days of a known HBV or HCV case was not demonstrated. CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopy reprocessing failures were not associated with an increased risk for BBP among individuals tested.
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spelling pubmed-44198182015-05-26 Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic Willmore, Jacqueline Ellis, Edward Etches, Vera Labrecque, Lise Osiowy, Carla Andonov, Anton McDermaid, Cameron Majury, Anna Achonu, Camille Maher, Maurica MacLean, Brenda Levy, Isra Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol Original Article OBJECTIVE: To determine whether transmission of blood-borne pathogens (BBPs) (hepatitis B virus [HBV], hepatitis C virus [HCV] and HIV) occurred as a result of endoscopy reprocessing failures identified during an inspection of a nonhospital endoscopy clinic in 2011. METHODS: The present analysis was a retrospective cohort study. Registered notification letters were mailed to 6992 patients who underwent endoscopy from 2002 to 2011 at one Canadian nonhospital endoscopy clinic, informing them of the infection control lapse and offering BBP testing. Multimedia communications and a telephone line supplemented notification. A retrospective study of patients with BBPs was performed with viral genetic testing and risk factor assessment for eligible patients. Risk for infection among patients whose procedure was within seven days of a known positive patient was compared with those whose procedure was performed more than seven days after a known postive patient. The seven-day period was selected as the period most likely to present a risk for transmission based on the documented cleaning procedures at the clinic and the available literature on virus survival. RESULTS: Ninety-five percent (6628 of 6992) of patients/estates were contacted and 5042 of 6728 (75%) living patients completed BBP testing. Three were newly diagnosed with HBV and 14 with HCV. Twenty-three and 48 tested positive for previously known HBV or HCV, respectively, 367 were immune to HBV due to natural infection and one was immune to HBV due to immunization. None tested positive for HIV. Sequencing did not reveal any relationships among the 46 unique case patients with viral genetic test results available. Ninety-three percent of patients reported alternative risk factors for BBP. An increased risk for infection among those who underwent a procedure within seven days of a known HBV or HCV case was not demonstrated. CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopy reprocessing failures were not associated with an increased risk for BBP among individuals tested. Pulsus Group Inc 2015 /pmc/articles/PMC4419818/ /pubmed/26015789 Text en Copyright© 2015 Pulsus Group Inc. All rights reserved This open-access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (CC BY-NC) (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits reuse, distribution and reproduction of the article, provided that the original work is properly cited and the reuse is restricted to noncommercial purposes. For commercial reuse, contact support@pulsus.com
spellingShingle Original Article
Willmore, Jacqueline
Ellis, Edward
Etches, Vera
Labrecque, Lise
Osiowy, Carla
Andonov, Anton
McDermaid, Cameron
Majury, Anna
Achonu, Camille
Maher, Maurica
MacLean, Brenda
Levy, Isra
Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic
title Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic
title_full Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic
title_fullStr Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic
title_full_unstemmed Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic
title_short Public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic
title_sort public health response to a large-scale endoscopy infection control lapse in a nonhospital clinic
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4419818/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26015789
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