Factors influencing environmental sampling recovery of healthcare pathogens from nonporous surfaces with cellulose sponges

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Abstract

Results from sampling healthcare surfaces for pathogens are difficult to interpret without understanding the factors that influence pathogen detection. We investigated the recovery of four healthcare-associated pathogens from three common surface materials, and how a body flu simulant (artificial test soil, ATS), deposition method, and contamination levels influence the percent of organisms recovered (%R). Known quantities of carbapenemaseproducing KPC+ Klebsiella pneumoniae (KPC), Acinetobacter baumannii, vancomycinresistant Enterococcus faecalis, and Clostrioes difficile spores (CD) were suspended in Butterfield's buffer or ATS, deposited on 323cm2 steel, plastic, and laminate surfaces, allowed to dry 1h, then sampled with a cellulose sponge wipe. Bacteria were eluted, cultured, CFU counted and %R determined relative to the inoculum. The %R varied by organism, from <1% (KPC) to almost 60% (CD) and was more dependent upon the organism's characteristics and presence of ATS than on surface type. KPC persistence as determined by culture also declined by <1 log10 within the 60 min drying time. For all organisms, the %R was significantly greater if suspended in ATS than if suspended in Butterfield's buffer (p<0.05), and for most organisms the %R was not significantly different when sampled from any of the three surfaces. Organisms deposited in multiple droplets were recovered at equal or higher %R than if spread evenly on the surface. This work assists in interpreting data collected while investigating a healthcare infection outbreak or while conducting infection intervention studies.

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APA

Rose, L. J., Houston, H., Martinez-Smith, M., Lyons, A. K., Whitworth, C., Reddy, S. C., & Noble-Wang, J. (2022). Factors influencing environmental sampling recovery of healthcare pathogens from nonporous surfaces with cellulose sponges. PLoS ONE, 17(1 January). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0261588

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