| Literature DB >> 32511432 |
Robert J Fischer1, Dylan H Morris2, Neeltje van Doremalen1, Shanda Sarchette1, M Jeremiah Matson1, Trenton Bushmaker1, Claude Kwe Yinda1, Stephanie N Seifert1, Amandine Gamble3, Brandi N Williamson1, Seth D Judson4, Emmie de Wit1, James O Lloyd-Smith3, Vincent J Munster1.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32511432 PMCID: PMC7217083 DOI: 10.1101/2020.04.11.20062018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: medRxiv
Figure 1.Decontamination of SARS-CoV-2 by four different methods. A) SARS-CoV-2 on N95 fabric and stainless steel surface was exposed to UV, 70 °C dry heat, 70% ethanol and vaporized hydrogen peroxide (VHP). 50 μl of 105 TCID50/mL of SARS-CoV was applied on N95 and stainless steel (SS). Samples were collected at indicted time-points post exposure to the decontamination method for UV, heat and ethanol and after 10 minutes for VHP. Viable virus titer is shown in TCID50/mL media on a logarithmic scale. All samples were quantified by end-point titration on Vero E6 cells. Plots show estimated mean titer across three replicates (circles and bars show the posterior median estimate of this mean and a 95% credible interval). Time-points with no positive wells for any replicate are plotted as triangles at the approximate single-replicate detection limit of the assay (LOD, see Appendix for discussion) to indicate that a range of sub-LOD values are plausible. Steel points at the LOD are offset slightly up and to the left to avoid overplotting. Lines show predicted decay of virus titer over time (lines; 50 random draws per replicate from the joint posterior distribution of the exponential decay rate, i.e. negative of the slope, and intercept, i.e. initial virus titer). Black dotted line shows approximate LOD: 100.5 TCID50/mL media. B) Mask integrity. Quantitative fit testing results for all the decontamination methods after decontamination and 2 hours of wear, for three consecutive runs. Data from six individual replicates (small dots) for each treatment are shown in addition to an estimated median fit factor (large dots), an estimated 68% range of fit factors (thick bars) and an estimated 95% range (thin bars). Fit factors are a measure of filtration performance: the ratio of the concentration of particles outside the mask to the concentration inside. The measurement machine reports value up to 200. A minimal fit factor of 100 (red dashed line) is required for a mask to pass a fit test. C) SARS-CoV-2 decontamination performance. Kill rate (y-axis), versus mask integrity after decontamination (x-axis; point represents estimated median, bar length represents estimated 68% range). The three panels report mask integrity after one, two or three decontamination cycles.