| Literature DB >> 32720256 |
Benjamin E Steinberg1,2, Kazuyoshi Aoyama1,2, Mark McVey1,2, David Levin1,2, Asad Siddiqui1,2, Farrukh Munshey1,2, Neil M Goldenberg1,2, David Faraoni1,2, Jason T Maynes3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Under times of supply chain stress, the availability of some medical equipment and supplies may become limited. The current pandemic involving severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 has highlighted limitations to the ordinary provision of personal protective equipment (PPE). For perioperative healthcare workers, N95 masks provide a stark example of PPE in short supply necessitating the creation of scientifically valid protocols for their decontamination and reuse.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; N95 cleaning; heat inactivation; hydrogen peroxide sterilization
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32720256 PMCID: PMC7384726 DOI: 10.1007/s12630-020-01770-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Anaesth ISSN: 0832-610X Impact factor: 6.713
N95 decontamination methods
| Method | Equipment | Tested against SARS-CoV-2 | Tested against other biologicals | Pros | Cons | Approved by (HC/FDA) | Key refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heat | Oven +/- humidity control | Yes (not directly on N95) | SARS-CoV-1, H1N1/H1N5 Influenza | Simple and available technology; no chemicals | Risk of mask deformation for fit | No | [ |
| Autoclave | Standard autoclave | Yes | Available technology; effective in | No direct evidence SARS- CoV-2; risk of mask deformation for fit | No | [ | |
| HPV | STERIS, Battelle (Bioquell) | Yes | Low temperature; Breaks down into non- toxic by products | Limited availability, only mask strap breakdown up to 20–30 cycles | Yes | [ | |
| HPGP | ASP STERRAD | Surrogates, no published data on SARS-CoV-2 | Low temperature; breaks down into non- toxic by products | Limited availability, limited to 3 decontamination cycles for mask integrity | Yes | [ | |
| iHP | SteraMist binary ionization | Yes | No published data | Low temperature | Limited availability, less testing overall on PPE integrity | No | [ |
| EtO | Specialized | No | No | No impact on the filter function and mask appearance | A Known human carcinogen | No | [ |
| UV | Specialized lights | No | MS2 bacteriophage; H1N1 influenza | Simple and available technology; no chemicals | May not penetrate inner layers of masks; possibly due to shadowing | No | [ |
EtO = ethylene oxide; HPGP = hydrogen peroxide gas vapour; HPV = hydrogen peroxide vapour; iHP = ionized hydrogen peroxide; SARS-CoV = severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus; SARS-CoV-2 = severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus 2; UV = ultraviolet light. A STERRAD system uses low-temperature gas plasma combined with HPV
Examples of commercially available N95 respirators with and without cellulose
| Cellulose-containing N95 | Cellulose-free N95 |
|---|---|
| 3M 9105 (+S) | 3M 1860 (+S) |
| 3M 1804 (+S) | 3M 1870+ |
| 3M 1805 (+S) | 3M 8110S |
| 3M 8000 | 3M 8210 |
| 3M 8200 | 3M 8210+ |
| 3M 8212 | 3M 8210V |
| 3M 8214 | 3M 8211 |
| 3M 8233 | 3M 8211+ |
| 3M 8293 | 3M 8271 |
| 3M 8512 | 3M 8511 |
| 3M 8514 | 3M 8515 |
| 3M 9010 | 3M 8516 |
| 3M 9105 (+S) | 3M 8576 3M 8577 |
| 3M 9010 | |
| 3M 9210+ | |
| 3M 9211+ | |
| Gerson 1730 | |
| Moldex 1500 Series | |
| Moldex 2200 | |
| Kimberly Clark 46727 |
Detailed product information for the included masks can be found at the respective manufacturer’s website: 3M (https://www.3mcanada.ca/3M/en_CA/company-ca/); Gerson (https://www.gersonco.com/product/1730-n95-particulate-respirator/); Moldex (https://www.moldex.com/product-category/respiratory-protection/disposable-respirators/n95-respirators/); Kimberly Clark (https://www.kcprofessional.ca/products/scientific-ppe/respirators/lab/46827-kimberly-clark-n95-particulate-filter-respirator-and-surgical-mask-fluid-protection-pouch-style). Additional lists of National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health-approved N95 respirators are provided by the Centers for Disease Control at https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/npptl/topics/respirators/disp_part/n95list1.html. Notably, cellulose-containing N95 respirators are often incompatible with hydrogen peroxide-based decontamination methods, such as the Battelle Critical Care Decontamination System (https://www.battelle.org/docs/default-source/commercial-offerings/industry-solutions/battelle-ccds-n95-guidance.pdf)
N95 retesting strategies
| Test | Methodology | Considerations | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aerosolized sodium chloride | Detection by photometry or particle count (e.g., PortaCount) | • NIOSH standard test (photometry) • Useful for N class masks (e.g., N95) • Capacity to test particles that are approximate the size of SARS-CoV-2 | [ |
| Aerosolized corn oil | Detection by photometry | • Tests particles larger than the N95 MPPS • Less electrostatic charge than sodium chloride testing • Useful for assessing lipophilic particle filtration (non-N class masks) | [ |
| Beads (e.g., silica, latex, polystyrene) | Detection by spectrophotometry | • Can be fluorescently tagged • Can be neutral or charged • Capacity to match size to MPPS | [ |
| Bacteria (e.g., | Detection by particle counting and viable growth | • Test biological particles with shapes, sizes, and charge similar to pathogen of interest | [ |
| Viruses (e.g., bacteriophage MS2 virus, T4, | Detected by measuring viable virus | • Test biological particles with shapes, sizes, and charge similar to pathogen of interest • Similar sizes to SARS-CoV-2 | [ |
MPPS = most penetrating particle size; N = not resistant to oil; NIOSH = National Institute for Occupational Health and Safety; SARS-CoV-2 = severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus 2