| Literature DB >> 32281689 |
Abhilash Perisetti1, Mahesh Gajendran2, Umesha Boregowda3, Pardeep Bansal4, Hemant Goyal5.
Abstract
A new coronavirus emerged in December 2019 in Wuhan city of China, named as the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2), and the disease was called coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19). The infection due to this virus spread exponentially throughout China and then spread across >205 nations, including the United States (US). Gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopies are routinely performed in the US and globally. Previous reports of isolated infection outbreaks were reported with endoscopes acting as potential vectors. While multidrug-resistant organisms have been reported to be spread by endoscopes, few cases of viruses such as hepatitis B and C are noted in the literature. COVID-19 is predominately spread by droplet transmission, although recent evidence has showed that shedding in feces and feco-oral transmission could also be possible. It is unclear if COVID-19 could be transmitted by endoscopes, but it could theoretically happen due to contact with mucous membranes and body fluids. GI endoscopies involve close contact with oral and colonic contents exposing endoscopy staff to respiratory and oropharyngeal secretions. This can increase the risk of contamination and contribute to virus transmission. Given these risks, all major GI societies have called for rescheduling elective non-urgent procedures and perform only emergent or urgent procedures based on the clinical need. Furthermore, pre-screening of all individuals prior to endoscopy is recommended. This article focuses on the risk of COVID-19 transmission by GI shedding, the potential role of endoscopes as a vector of this novel virus, including transmission during endoscopies, and prevention strategies including deferral of elective non-urgent endoscopy procedures.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; coronavirus; endoscopy; pandemic
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32281689 PMCID: PMC7262209 DOI: 10.1111/den.13693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dig Endosc ISSN: 0915-5635 Impact factor: 6.337
Figure 1Major global viral outbreaks in the last 20 years. [Information sources: Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health Organization (WHO)].
Figure 2Timeline of the global spread of COVID‐19. [Information sources: Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health Organization (WHO)].
Recommendation from various gastrointestinal societies around the world
| Recommendation | Joint GI American society | ESGE position statement | Indian society of gastroenterology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prescreening | All patients with high‐risk symptoms should be screening and procedures should be deferred if possible | All patients should be screened per local human resources and policies and temporarily postpone elective procedures | All patients should be screened prior to endoscopy |
| Classification and scheduling of procedures |
Reschedule elective non‐urgent procedures Some non‐urgent procedures which of high priority may need to be performed Classification of procedures into non‐urgent postpone and non‐urgent perform is useful |
Reschedule elective non‐urgent procedures. A triage should be applied to health professionals Each GI unit should have a detailed plan for cleaning and disinfecting endoscopy procedure rooms For patients in ICU, GI endoscopy should be performed at bedside | Procedures should be divided into emergent (life‐saving such as acute upper or lower GI bleeding, impacted foreign body, cholangitis), urgent (conditions that a significant impact may be achieved on outcome in 1‐month time by an endoscopic procedure such as GI cancers, nutritional support for the enteral route, draining malignant biliary obstruction, stenting of malignant luminal obstruction), routine (procedures other than urgent or emergent) |
| Screening on arrival to endoscopy suit | Prescreen all patients for high‐risk exposure or symptoms. History about contact or travel to high‐risk areas or symptoms should be asked |
Triage the patients and staff based on the symptoms. Low‐risk patient (No symptoms, no travel history and no contact with COVID‐individual), high‐risk (positive symptoms with no travel or contact history, positive symptoms with contact/ travel, no symptoms but contact/recent travel to the high‐risk area) Encourage telemedicine care for prescreening | All patients should be considered low‐risk (no symptoms/ travel/contact with COVID‐19 individuals), intermediate‐risk (symptoms but no contact or stay during last 14 days, absent symptoms but contact or travel present), high‐risk (symptoms with contact/ travel/ stay in high‐risk areas) |
| Personal protective equipment (PPE) | All endoscopy team members should wear PPE | Infection prevention and control measures should be considered. If possible negative‐pressure room should be used. For high‐risk patients recommend respiratory PPE and two pairs of gloves | Recommend minimal stay in the endoscopy rooms, use of PPE throughout the procedure, use of chemical disinfectants. Use of disposable endoscopic accessories as much as possible. Use of standard endoscopy room disinfection policy |
| Follow‐up | Phone follow‐up 7–14 days after the procedure | Phone follow‐up 7–14 days after the procedure for any new diagnosis | Non‐urgent procedures should be reevaluated as outpatient. Use of digital media |
| Special groups | Patients on immunosuppressive drugs should continue medications and assess risk‐benefit ratio after discussing with their health care provider | N/A | Patients with immunosuppression (chemotherapy/ steroids) should contact health care provider. Postponement of primary prophylaxis for variceal ligation for 4–6 weeks |
ESGE, European society of gastrointestinal endoscopy; GI, Gastrointestinal.
Joint GI American societies‐ American Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE), American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD), American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) and American Gastroenterology Association (AGA).