| Literature DB >> 27522193 |
C Johnston1, J Callum2, J Mohr3, A Duong4, A Garibaldi4, N Simunovic4, O R Ayeni5,6.
Abstract
The use of skin allografts to temporarily replace lost or damaged skin is practiced worldwide. Naturally occurring contamination can be present on skin or can be introduced at recovery or during processing. This contamination can pose a threat to allograft recipients. Bacterial culture and disinfection of allografts are mandated, but the specific practices and methodologies are not dictated by standards. A systematic review of literature from three databases found 12 research articles that evaluated bioburden reduction processes of skin grafts. The use of broad spectrum antibiotics and antifungal agents was the most frequently identified disinfection method reported demonstrating reductions in contamination rates. It was determined that the greatest reduction in the skin allograft contamination rates utilized 0.1 % peracetic acid or 25 kGy of gamma irradiation at lower temperatures.Entities:
Keywords: Bioburden; Skin allografts; Skin decontamination; Tissue banking; Tissue donation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27522193 PMCID: PMC5116035 DOI: 10.1007/s10561-016-9569-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Bank ISSN: 1389-9333 Impact factor: 1.522
Fig. 1Screening process flow diagram
Study characteristics
| References | Country | Sample size | Donora | Recovery site | Tissues |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pirnay et al. ( | Belgium | 148 Donors | Cadaveric | Operating theatre or autopsy room | Skin allografts |
| Lindford et al. ( | Netherlands | 115 Donors | Organ | Operating theatre | Skin allografts |
| Pianigiani et al. ( | Italy | 723 Donors | Cadaveric organ living | Operating theatre | Skin allografts |
| Kairiyama et al. ( | Argentina | 106 Skin batches | Cadaveric | NR | Skin allografts |
| Mathur et al. ( | India | 30 Skin grafts | Cadaveric | NR | Skin allografts |
| Neely et al. ( | USA | 114 Skin grafts | NR | Operating room | Skin allografts |
| Rooney et al. ( | UK | 3 Donors | NR | NR | Skin allografts |
| Ireland and Spelman ( | Australia | 534 samples from 24 donors | NR | NR | Musculoskeletal, skin and cardiac allografts |
| Lomas et al. ( | UK | 4 Donors | Cadaveric | NR | Skin allografts |
| Baldeschi et al. ( | UK | 40 Skin grafts | NR | NR | Skin allograft (eyelid) |
| van Baare et al. ( | Netherlands | 1929 Donors | Cadaveric | Autopsy room | Skin allograft |
| White et al. | USA | 182 Samples from 19 donors | Cadaveric | Autopsy room | Skin allografts |
NR not reported
aSamples were recovered from cadavers (tissue donor), organ (organ and tissue) or from living patients