Cargando…

1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms

BACKGROUND: “Green” construction approaches may place hospitals at risk for long-term contamination of potable water, presenting hazards for immunosuppressed patients. Remediation may be needed to manage these unanticipated consequences. An indolent, 11-year cluster of Sphingomonas koreensis infecti...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Carroll, David M, Michelin, Angela V, Craig, Melanie J, Johnson, Johnathan J, Yoo, Jonathan N, Evans, Michele R, Henderson, David K, Lau, Anna F, Palmore, Tara N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6809147/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1090
_version_ 1783461913555894272
author Carroll, David M
Michelin, Angela V
Craig, Melanie J
Johnson, Johnathan J
Yoo, Jonathan N
Evans, Michele R
Henderson, David K
Lau, Anna F
Palmore, Tara N
Palmore, Tara N
author_facet Carroll, David M
Michelin, Angela V
Craig, Melanie J
Johnson, Johnathan J
Yoo, Jonathan N
Evans, Michele R
Henderson, David K
Lau, Anna F
Palmore, Tara N
Palmore, Tara N
author_sort Carroll, David M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: “Green” construction approaches may place hospitals at risk for long-term contamination of potable water, presenting hazards for immunosuppressed patients. Remediation may be needed to manage these unanticipated consequences. An indolent, 11-year cluster of Sphingomonas koreensis infections at the NIH Clinical Center was traced to potable water. During the investigation, 4 sinks in 2 ICU rooms were found to have intractable contamination. Despite replacement of sink fixtures, faucet swabs and water continued to grow S. koreensis, and mean free chlorine residual (FCR) from the sinks was 0.27 mg/L (goal > 0.5). We undertook a major project to replace and reroute sections of pipes leading to the sinks (Figures 1 and 2). METHODS: Hot and cold water pipes were removed from the sinks to the supply pipes and replaced. Pipes were rerouted so that hot and cold water supplying the sinks returned in a loop to the domestic hot water heater to eliminate 10-meter drop-down sections of dead-leg pipe. Automatic faucets were replaced with manual faucets. Faucet biofilm was swabbed and cultured monthly for S. koreensis. Environmental samples were cultured on sheep blood agar for 5 days. Yellow colonies were subcultured and identified by MALDI-TOF MS (Bruker). RESULTS: Demolition of the wall behind the sinks revealed hot and cold water piping containing stagnant water. Water pooled in cold water pipe had heavy growth of S. koreensis; water from the hot water pipe could not be collected. Hot and cold water FCR for the sinks after piping changes averaged 0.74 and 1.07 mg/L, respectively, compared with 0.27 mg/L simultaneously from automated faucets in unmodified ICU rooms. Faucet cultures were negative for S. koreensis after replumbing, and have remained negative for >6 months. CONCLUSION: New hospital construction strategies appear to increase potable water contamination risks; novel remediation approaches are needed. Replacing contaminated water pipes and rerouting pipes to minimize stagnation eradicated longstanding contamination of 2 ICU sinks. Although the experiment was conducted on a small scale, it demonstrates that plumbing flaws that jeopardize patient safety can be corrected through multidisciplinary collaboration and creative plumbing strategies. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6809147
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68091472019-10-28 1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms Carroll, David M Michelin, Angela V Craig, Melanie J Johnson, Johnathan J Yoo, Jonathan N Evans, Michele R Henderson, David K Lau, Anna F Palmore, Tara N Palmore, Tara N Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: “Green” construction approaches may place hospitals at risk for long-term contamination of potable water, presenting hazards for immunosuppressed patients. Remediation may be needed to manage these unanticipated consequences. An indolent, 11-year cluster of Sphingomonas koreensis infections at the NIH Clinical Center was traced to potable water. During the investigation, 4 sinks in 2 ICU rooms were found to have intractable contamination. Despite replacement of sink fixtures, faucet swabs and water continued to grow S. koreensis, and mean free chlorine residual (FCR) from the sinks was 0.27 mg/L (goal > 0.5). We undertook a major project to replace and reroute sections of pipes leading to the sinks (Figures 1 and 2). METHODS: Hot and cold water pipes were removed from the sinks to the supply pipes and replaced. Pipes were rerouted so that hot and cold water supplying the sinks returned in a loop to the domestic hot water heater to eliminate 10-meter drop-down sections of dead-leg pipe. Automatic faucets were replaced with manual faucets. Faucet biofilm was swabbed and cultured monthly for S. koreensis. Environmental samples were cultured on sheep blood agar for 5 days. Yellow colonies were subcultured and identified by MALDI-TOF MS (Bruker). RESULTS: Demolition of the wall behind the sinks revealed hot and cold water piping containing stagnant water. Water pooled in cold water pipe had heavy growth of S. koreensis; water from the hot water pipe could not be collected. Hot and cold water FCR for the sinks after piping changes averaged 0.74 and 1.07 mg/L, respectively, compared with 0.27 mg/L simultaneously from automated faucets in unmodified ICU rooms. Faucet cultures were negative for S. koreensis after replumbing, and have remained negative for >6 months. CONCLUSION: New hospital construction strategies appear to increase potable water contamination risks; novel remediation approaches are needed. Replacing contaminated water pipes and rerouting pipes to minimize stagnation eradicated longstanding contamination of 2 ICU sinks. Although the experiment was conducted on a small scale, it demonstrates that plumbing flaws that jeopardize patient safety can be corrected through multidisciplinary collaboration and creative plumbing strategies. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6809147/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1090 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Carroll, David M
Michelin, Angela V
Craig, Melanie J
Johnson, Johnathan J
Yoo, Jonathan N
Evans, Michele R
Henderson, David K
Lau, Anna F
Palmore, Tara N
Palmore, Tara N
1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms
title 1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms
title_full 1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms
title_fullStr 1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms
title_full_unstemmed 1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms
title_short 1227. Replacement and Rerouting of Pipes to Remediate Intractable Contamination of Potable Water Fixtures in a Pair of ICU Rooms
title_sort 1227. replacement and rerouting of pipes to remediate intractable contamination of potable water fixtures in a pair of icu rooms
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6809147/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1090
work_keys_str_mv AT carrolldavidm 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT michelinangelav 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT craigmelaniej 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT johnsonjohnathanj 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT yoojonathann 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT evansmicheler 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT hendersondavidk 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT lauannaf 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT palmoretaran 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms
AT palmoretaran 1227replacementandreroutingofpipestoremediateintractablecontaminationofpotablewaterfixturesinapairoficurooms