| Literature DB >> 34620951 |
Raveen Rathnasinghe1,2,3, Robert F Karlicek4,5, Michael Schotsaert1,3, Mattheos Koffas6,7,8, Brigitte L Arduini7, Sonia Jangra1, Bowen Wang7,9, Jason L Davis7, Mohammed Alnaggar10, Anthony Costa11, Richard Vincent12, Adolfo García-Sastre1,13,14,3, Deepak Vashishth15,16, Priti Balchandani17.
Abstract
Particulate respirators such as N95s are an essential component of personal protective equipment (PPE) for front-line workers. This study describes a rapid and effective UVC irradiation system that would facilitate the safe re-use of N95 respirators and provides supporting information for deploying UVC for decontamination of SARS-CoV-2 during the COVID-19 pandemic. To assess the inactivation potential of the proposed UVC germicidal device as a function of time by using 3 M 8211-N95 particulate respirators inoculated with SARS-CoV-2. A germicidal UVC device to deliver tailored UVC dose was developed and test coupons (2.5 cm2) of the 3 M-N95 respirator were inoculated with 106 plaque-forming units (PFU) of SARS-CoV-2 and were UV irradiated. Different exposure times were tested (0-164 s) by fixing the distance between the lamp and the test coupon to 15.2 cm while providing an exposure of at least 5.43 mWcm-2. Primary measure of outcome was titration of infectious virus recovered from virus-inoculated respirator test coupons after UVC exposure. Other measures included the method validation of the irradiation protocol, using lentiviruses (biosafety level-2 agent) and establishment of the germicidal UVC exposure protocol. An average of 4.38 × 103 PFU ml-1 (SD 772.68) was recovered from untreated test coupons while 4.44 × 102 PFU ml-1 (SD 203.67), 4.00 × 102 PFU ml-1 (SD 115.47), 1.56 × 102 PFU ml-1 (SD 76.98) and 4.44 × 101 PFU ml-1 (SD 76.98) was recovered in exposures 2, 6, 18 and 54 s per side respectively. The germicidal device output and positioning was monitored and a minimum output of 5.43 mW cm-2 was maintained. Infectious SARS-CoV-2 was not detected by plaque assays (minimal level of detection is 67 PFU ml-1) on N95 respirator test coupons when irradiated for 120 s per side or longer suggesting 3.5 log reduction in 240 s of irradiation, 1.3 J cm-2. A scalable germicidal UVC device to deliver tailored UVC dose for rapid decontamination of SARS-CoV-2 was developed. UVC germicidal irradiation of N95 test coupons inoculated with SARS-CoV-2 for 120 s per side resulted in 3.5 log reduction of virus. These data support the reuse of N95 particle-filtrate apparatus upon irradiation with UVC and supports use of UVC-based decontamination of SARS-CoV-2 during the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34620951 PMCID: PMC8497543 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-99431-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Schematic, dose response and exposure characterization of the proposed UVC decontamination device. (A) Schematic of the operational germicidal device. The UVC germicidal device comprises a conveyor belt which is scalable. (B) Real image of the prototype germicidal device. (C) Changes to the dose response curve as a response belt speed. Total dose changes in response to the conveyor belt speed and exposure time. (D) Schematic of the experimental setup lamp and surface positioning. The germicidal lamp bulbs contain 3.8 cm between them and the distance from the lamp to the surface is 15.2 cm. Exposure changes as a result of positioning was monitored. (E) Exposure profile of the lamp based on the surface placement as indicated in (D). The UVC 254 nm detector was placed in positions 1 cm apart, covering a total distance of 7 cm. Measurements were taken at 3 min at each time point after initial lamp warm up.
Figure 2UVC exposure of N95 test coupon squares spiked with LV-EGFP indicated inactivation of lentivirus after treatment for a total of 120 s. N95 test coupon squares (2.5 cm2) with all layers were incubated in infection media spiked with LV-EGFP for 15 min. The test coupons were then placed on open 10 cm polystyrene cell culture dishes 15.2 cm from the lamp. After warming up the lamp, the blocks were treated for 60 s per each side. Test coupons were left in infection media for 15 min, protected from light, at room temperature. 0.8 ml of the test coupon derived media mix was used from each condition to infect A549 cells. Cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, stained with DAPI and imaged using a Cellomics ArrayScan. (A) UVC treatment of N95 test coupons spiked with LV-EGFP indicates viral inactivation after 120 s of total exposure. GFP + cells and the total viral transduction units per ml of supernatant were assessed and data shown here are derived from two replicates. (B) Fluorescence microscopy analysis of infected A549 cells indicate viral inactivation. Supernatants derived from treated or untreated 3 M-N95 test coupons were used to infect A549 monolayers. 48 h post infection, cells were fixed and stained for nuclei using DAPI (blue).
Figure 3UVC irradiation for 240 s induces over 3.5 log reduction in SARS-CoV-2 viral titers. (A) Time course of log reduction of SARS-CoV-2 in N95 test coupons treated with UVC irradiation. N95 mask squares (2.5 cm2) with all layers were incubated with infection media spiked with SARS-CoV-2 for 15 min. The respirator coupons were then placed on open 10 cm polystyrene cell culture dishes 15.2 cm from the lamp. After warming up the lamp, the blocks were treated for the indicated amount of time per each side. Respirators were left in infection media at 4 °C overnight. One ml of the mask derived media mix was used from each condition and was titered in VERO-E6 cells using plaque assays targeting the SARS-CoV-2 Spike (S) and Nucleocapsid protein (NP). Each dot represents data from three independent experiments and plotted data bars represent mean and standard deviation for the triplicates. Vertical dashed line delineates untreated and treated parts of the experiment. Horizontal dotted line is the minimal level of detection (approximately 67 PFU ml−1). Baseline for the assay is shown using a continuous line. (B) Regression analysis of viral reduction as per timely UVC irradiation.
Figure 4UVC irradiation for 240 s inactivates over 2.5 log reduction in EMCV viral titers. (A) Time course log reduction of EMCV PFU in N95 test coupons treated with UVC irradiation. N95 mask squares (2.5 cm2) with all layers were incubated with infection media spiked with EMCV for 15 min. The mask coupons were then placed on open 10 cm polystyrene cell culture dishes 15.2 cm from the lamp. After warming up the lamp, the coupons were treated for the indicated amount of time per each side, and were left in infection media at 4 °C overnight. One ml of the respirator derived media mix was used from each condition and was titered in VERO-CCL81 cells using standard plaque assays and crystal-violet staining. Each dot represents data from three independent experiments and plotted data bars represent mean and standard deviation for the triplicates. Vertical dashed line delineates untreated and treated parts of the experiment. Horizontal dotted line indicates the minimal level of detection (approximately 67 PFU ml−1). Baseline for the assay is shown using a continuous line. (B) Regression analysis of viral reduction as per timely UVC irradiation.