Are
Endoscopes Being
Disinfected Properly?
Excerpt
By Tom
Martin and Alexa Pozniak, ABCNews.com
Undergoing an endoscopic procedure may actually put you at risk
for infection, some experts say.
Endoscopes help save lives by allowing doctors to look inside our
bodies and even take biopsy specimens with ease. But a heated debate
is now raging over potential risks caused by scopes inadequately
cleaned between exams.
The improperly cleaned equipment could transmit lingering bacteria
and viruses from patient to patient, including tuberculosis and
hepatitis C. Every year, more than 15 million people undergo what
is known as an endoscopic procedure, an exam by a physician using
a tiny camera mounted on a thin, flexible scope. It is a tool
that can help in the early detection of colon cancer and other
ailments.
A 1995 Food and Drug Administration study that examined endoscopes
at 80 US health facilities, for instance, found 38 sites that
had endoscopes which were deemed "clean and ready for use," but
which were, in fact, "visibly encrusted with debris." While not
all residue found in an endoscope is infectious material, a less-than-clean
instrument could conceivably transmit disease.
"When scopes are used to look inside of the colon, they pick
up things like E. coli or salmonella pseudomonas that might contaminate
the scope and give someone a few days of nausea and diarrhea,"
says Lewis. "In an elderly patient that actually may turn into
a fatal infection," he adds.
How Great a Risk?
The chances of an infectious organism being transmitted to a
patient by one of these instruments is only one in 1.8 million,
according to the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.
But David Lewis, a microbiologist with the University of Georgia,
told ABCNEWS' Medical Editor Dr. Timothy Johnson on Good Morning
America that the risk is much greater. "I've calculated, just
based on amount of blood that can leak back out of the scope after
it's manually cleaned, that the infection rate may be as high
as several patients out of 100," he says. "I think probably the
actual infection rate is somewhere in between."
The problem, Lewis says, is that bacteria and viruses are extremely
difficult to trace back to an endoscope, even if that was their
source.
"We don't have a good tracking system. Patients get endoscopy
done, they go home, they're sick, and they go back to their primary
care physician, not to their endoscopist. So, rarely does the
endoscopist even know that the patient got sick after the procedure
was done," he says.
'How Could This Happen?'
In some cases, patients believe that the connection between
a procedure and an infection is quite clear.
Eighteen months ago Mary Greene fell ill after undergoing a
colonoscopy at the Summit Surgical Center in Voorhees, N.J.. Green
says she was shocked to learn recently that at the time of her
procedure, the machine used by the center to clean the scopes
had been broken.
"I just felt, you know, 'How could this happen?' I didn't find
out what happened until I read it in the newspaper on January
23rd [2002], and then I was really upset," she says.
Greene, who recovered after a course of antibiotics, has now
joined in a lawsuit that alleges that as many as 1,800 patients
at the Summit Center may have been placed at risk of exposure
to infectious agents over a 16-month period. Lewis is an expert
witness for the plaintiff.
The center has said there is a remote possibility that the machine
may have been malfunctioning during a two-week period, and has
offered precautionary screening to all patients who were treated
during that time.
Difficult to Clean
Dr. Paul Schroy, director of clinical gastroenterology research
at Boston Medical Center, believes that when it comes to disinfecting
scopes, most endoscopy units are getting the job done.
"It's a highly effective process," he says. "In the cases where
disease has been transmitted, scopes were not handled properly."
But according to Lewis, even health facilities that make a serious
effort to clean their endoscopes may fall short of this goal.
One reason is that many endoscopes have tiny tubes which are
difficult or impossible to clean manually with brushes. Another
reason is that the FDA recommended time for immersion in disinfectants
is only 45 minutes.
"We're looking at a process that may take an hour and a half
to two hours to properly do the procedure between patients," he
adds.
According to a 1999 study reported in the journal Gastrointestinal
Endoscopy, many scopes are not left in the cleaning solution for
the FDA specified 45 minutes.
New Disposable Technology
Dr. Armin Ernst, director of interventional pulmonology at Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, points out that new
scope technologies might offer ways of reducing the risk of spreading
infections.
"Every time humans are involved, human error is a potential.
I think we need to pursue other avenues. For example, disposable
guides, disposable sheaths, disposable instruments even, since
that will be the ultimate in safety."
Vision Sciences Inc., in Natick Mass., has already developed
a disposable sheath. But critics of disposable endoscopic technology
argue that such sheaths are difficult to use, and there is no
reason to switch to this more costly alternative when no significant
risk to patients has been clearly demonstrated.
Even as experts disagree on the actual risk to patients, they
all agree that endoscopy is an invaluable medical tool.
"The chance of infection is small. The chance of having a very
serious health problem from avoiding endoscopy is quite high,"
says Lewis.
Johnson suggests patients should be proactive and ask questions.
"Go to the doctor, nurse, and say 'How many minutes do you clean
it? What do you do?'" he recommends. "I think in major centers
you can have confidence the scopes are cleaned properly all the
time. In smaller offices there might be more of a risk
but of course you ask, 'Do you leave it in the cleaning solution
for 45 minutes? Do you follow the F.D.A. guidelines?' That will
put them on notice."
Reference
Source 104
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