| Literature DB >> 30501091 |
Huasong Peng1, Muhammad Bilal2, Hafiz M N Iqbal3.
Abstract
Herein, we reviewed laboratory-acquired infections (LAIs) along with their health-related biological risks to provide an evidence base to tackle biosafety/biosecurity and biocontainment issues. Over the past years, a broad spectrum of pathogenic agents, such as bacteria, fungi, viruses, parasites, or genetically modified organisms, have been described and gained a substantial concern due to their profound biological as well as ecological risks. Furthermore, the emergence and/or re-emergence of life-threatening diseases are of supreme concern and come under the biosafety and biosecurity agenda to circumvent LAIs. Though the precise infection risk after an exposure remains uncertain, LAIs inspections revealed that Brucella spp., Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Salmonella spp., Shigella spp., Rickettsia spp., and Neisseria meningitidis are the leading causes. Similarly, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as well as hepatitis B (HBV) and C viruses (HCV), and the dimorphic fungi are accountable for the utmost number of viral and fungal-associated LAIs. In this context, clinical laboratories at large and microbiology, mycology, bacteriology, and virology-oriented laboratories, in particular, necessitate appropriate biosafety and/or biosecurity measures to ensure the safety of laboratory workers and working environment, which are likely to have direct or indirect contact/exposure to hazardous materials or organisms. Laboratory staff education and training are indispensable to gain an adequate awareness to handle biologically hazardous materials as per internationally recognized strategies. In addition, workshops should be organized among laboratory workers to let them know the epidemiology, pathogenicity, and human susceptibility of LAIs. In this way, several health-related threats that result from the biologically hazardous materials can be abridged or minimized and controlled by the correct implementation of nationally and internationally certified protocols that include proper microbiological practices, containment devices/apparatus, satisfactory facilities or resources, protective barriers, and specialized education and training of laboratory staffs. The present work highlights this serious issue of LAIs and associated risks with suitable examples. Potential preventive strategies to tackle an array of causative agents are also discussed. In this respect, the researchers and scientific community may benefit from the lessons learned in the past to anticipate future problems.Entities:
Keywords: biohazards; biological risks; biosafety and biosecurity measures; laboratory-acquired infections; life-threatening diseases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30501091 PMCID: PMC6313313 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15122697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Laboratory-acquired infections (LAIs) sources, the outer circle shows a possible chain of infection causing route.
Figure 2A schematic representation of a biosafety concept and four biosafety levels (BSL) with their risk intensity.
Summary of the LAI reports in the Asia-Pacific region.
| Year | Country | Microorganism | Affected Worker | Laboratory Type/Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Taiwan |
| - | - |
| 2014 | South Korea | Dengue | Laboratory staff | Research/BSL2 |
| 2011 | Australia | Dengue | Scientist | Research/BSL2 |
| 2010 | India | Buffalopox virus (BPXV) (Z) | Researcher | - |
| 2009 | Malaysia |
| Laboratory staff | Clinical |
| 2006 | Taiwan | Graduate student | Research | |
| 2006 | PR China | Seoul virus and hantavirus (Z) | 8 postgraduate students | Research |
| 2004 | Taiwan | Dengue type 1 | Graduate student | Research |
| 2004 | Taiwan | SARS-CoV (Z) | Researcher | Research |
| 2004 | PR China | SARS-CoV (Z) | 8 human cases, 1 died | Research |
| 2003 | Singapore | SARS-CoV (Z) | Graduate student | Research/BSL3 |
| 2002 | Taiwan | Scientist | Research | |
| 2002 | Australia | Laboratory staff | Clinical | |
| 2001 | Japan | Researcher | Research | |
| 2000 | South Korea | Worker | - | |
| 1999 | Taiwan | Laboratory staff | - | |
| 1998 | Japan | Bacteriologist | - | |
| 1996–2000 | Australia | Various | Clinical | |
| 1996 | Malaysia |
| Laboratory staff | - |
| 1992 | Australia | 3 Laboratory staff | Diagnostic | |
| 1990 | South Korea | Laboratory staff | Clinical | |
| 1990 | India | Worker | Clinical | |
| 1989 | South Korea | Laboratory staff | Research | |
| 1987 | Australia | Newcastle disease virus (Z) | Laboratory staff | Research/BSL3 |
| 1986 | Australia | Researcher | Research | |
| 1985 | Japan | Pathologist | Research | |
| 1982 | Australia | Laboratory staff | Clinical |
Note: Data collected from the American Biological Safety Association [18].
Figure 3In which context did the infection happen? Reproduced from Wurtz et al. [36], with permission from Springer Nature. Copyright © 2016, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
WHO and NIH risk group classifications. Reproduced from WHO [54].
| Risk Group | Individual Risk | Community Risk | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Low | Low | A microorganism that is unlikely to cause human or animal disease. |
| 2 | Moderate | Low | A pathogen that can cause human or animal disease but is unlikely to be a serious hazard to laboratory workers, the community, livestock or the environment. |
| 3 | High | Low/moderate | A pathogen that usually causes serious human or animal disease but does not ordinarily spread from one infected individual to another. |
| 4 | High | High | A pathogen that usually causes serious human or animal disease and can be readily transmitted from one individual to another, directly or indirectly. |