| Literature DB >> 35794648 |
Axel Kramer1,2,3, Mardjan Arvand4, Bärbel Christiansen5,6, Stephanie Dancer7,8, Maren Eggers9, Martin Exner5,10, Dieter Müller11, Nico T Mutters5,10, Ingeborg Schwebke12, Didier Pittet13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The approval of ethanol by the Biocidal Products Regulation has been under evaluation since 2007. This follows concern over alcohol uptake from ethanol-based hand rubs (EBHR). If ethanol is classified as carcinogenic, mutagenic, or reprotoxic by the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), then this would affect infection prevention and control practices. AIM: A review was performed to prove that ethanol is toxicological uncritical and indispensable for hand antisepsis because of its unique activity against non-enveloped viruses and thus the resulting lack of alternatives. Therefore, the following main points are analyzed: The effectiveness of ethanol in hand hygiene, the evidence of ethanol at blood/tissue levels through hand hygiene in healthcare, and the evidence of toxicity of different blood/tissue ethanol levels and the non-comparability with alcoholic consumption and industrial exposure.Entities:
Keywords: Absorption; Biocidal product regulation; Ethanol based hand rub; Hand antisepsis; Inactivation; Memorandum; Non-enveloped viruses; Patient safety; Risk–benefit-assessment; WHO; Worker safety
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35794648 PMCID: PMC9257567 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-022-01134-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 6.454
State of approval of ethanol as a biocide by Biocidal Products Regulation
| Stages of development | Aim or conclusion |
|---|---|
| 2007: Beginning of the evaluation by the Greek authority | Development of a dossier for the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) as basis for harmonized classification of ethanol |
| 2015: First decision of Greek authority | Classification as CMR: carcinogen; mutagen; reprotoxic |
| July 2020: Updated decision of Greek authority [ | Classification as reproductive toxicity category 2 (presumed human reproductive toxicant) |
Efficacy of solutions based on ethanol and 2-propanol from quantitative suspension tests against non-enveloped viruses (sufficient efficacy is defined for ≥ 4 log10 reduction or up to test detection limit)
| Species | Strain, type | Alcohol content/necessary exposure time | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol | 2-propanol | |||
| Adenovirus | Type 3 | 77–83%c/1 min | 90%b/5 mind,e | [ |
| Type 5 | 80a/30 s | [ | ||
| Type 7 | 77–83%c/1 min | [ | ||
| Type 8 | 70%c/2 mine | [ | ||
| Coxsackievirus | A16 | 90%c/5 mind | 90%/60 mind,e | [ |
| B1 | 60%b/10 mind | 95%c/10 mind,e | [ | |
| B2 | 85%c/30 s Ø | 90%c/1 he | [ | |
| B3 | 90%c/15 secf | 90%c/1 he | ||
| B4 | 60%c/100 s | 90%c/1 he | ||
| B5 | 77–83%b/1 min, 90%b/10 s, 80%b/30 s | 90%/60 mind,e | [ | |
| Echovirus | Type 6 | 50%c/10 mind | 90%c/10 mind | [ |
| Type 7 | 80%c/1 min, 90%c/30 s | 90%/60 mind,e | [ | |
| Type 11 | 95%b/20 s–1 min, 80%b/90%b/15 mind | 90b%/15 mind,e | [ | |
| Type 12 | 70%b/80%b, 90%b/15 mind | 90%b/ 15 mind,e | [ | |
| Feline Calicivirus | Strain F9 (ATCC VR-782) | 50%b/ 70%b, 90b/5 mind,e | [ | |
| Human enterovirus | Type 70 | 70%, 80%, 90%c/10 s | 70%, 80%, 90%b/60 mind | [ |
| Type 71 | 80%b/1 min, 90%b/30 s | 90%b/60 mind,e | [ | |
| Hepatitis A virus (HAV) | HM175/24a | 80–95%a/2 min | [ | |
| Murine Norovirus | Strain S99 Berlin | 80%/30 s 72.4%b (6 mL)/30 s, 86%b (3 mL)/30 s, 89.5b (3 mL)/15 resp. 30 s | [ | |
| Type 1 | 70–90%b/ 30 s | 70%b/5mind | [ | |
| Poliovirus | Type 1 | 73.5%a/10 mind, 80%c/30 s, 80%b/1 min, 90%c/10 s, 90%b/1 min, 95%a/30 s | 70%b / 10 mind,e 80%b and 95%b / 10 mind,e 60–90%b/15 mind,e, 90%/60 mind,e | [ |
| Polyomavirus | SV 40 | 78.2%a/10 mind,e | [ | |
| HPV16 pseudo-virus | 60%, 70%c/5 mind | 60%, 70%c/5 mind,e | [ | |
| Rhinovirus | Type 2 | 80%c/3–60 mind,e | [ | |
| Rotavirus | Wa | 85%a/30 s | [ | |
aw/w
bv/v
cUnclear whether w/w or v/v
dThe exposure time is not feasible in practice
eNon-active concentration contact time ratio
f3log10 reduction
Examples of non-enveloped virus transmission via hands leading to nosocomial outbreaks and examples of hand rub efficacy in animal husbandry
| Virus | Transmission mode | References |
|---|---|---|
| Adenoviruses species A–C, E–G, Species D types 8, 37, 53, 54, 64 | Respiratory transmission as well as via hands and surfaces Epidemic keratoconjunctivitis transmission predominantly via hands and surfaces; types 4 and 7 also via swimming pools | [ [ |
| Aphthovirus | This foot-and-mouth virus may be transferred between animals without virucidal hand rub via animal care personnel | [ |
| Bocavirus | Mainly respiratory transmission, but also via hands and surfaces | [ |
| Coxsackievirus group A types 1–22, 24, group B types 1–6 | Transmission mainly via hands; hand, foot and mouth disease worldwide more than 100 outbreaks in nurseries, but also nosocomial infections in adults; | [ |
| Echovirus serotypes 1–9, 11–21 24–27, 29–33 | Transmission predominantly via direct or indirect oral contact, but also via hands | [ |
| Enterovirus A 71; D28, 70 | Respiratory transmission and through hands; A 71 epidemic paralysis | [ |
| HAV | Transmission predominantly fecal–oral via hands by contact with an infected person in cases of inadequate hand antisepsis and inadequate terminal cleaning | [ |
| HEV | Transmission predominantly fecal–oral via hands, spread is proven through person-to-person contact in genotype-1 infections | [ |
| Human papillomavirus | Mainly sexual transmission, but also via hands and vaginal ultrasound probes | [ |
| Human rhinovirus | Mainly respiratory transmission, but also via hands, especially in an outbreak | [ |
| Norovirus | In 18.5% of analyzed outbreaks, virus transmission by HCW via hands | [ |
| After primary food-borne outbreak, further transmission by staff | [ | |
| Interruption of an outbreak after changing the virucidally active ingredients | [ | |
| Parvovirus B19 | Mainly respiratory transmission, but also via hands, transmissibility in outbreak 31% | [ |
| Rotavirus | Outbreak in adults with transmission between patients via hands | [ |
| Poliovirus | Transmission fecal–oral via hands and/or droplets or aerosols | [ |
Transmission rate from artificially contaminated hands or fingertips to inanimate surfaces
| Virus | Level of contamination | Contact time (sec) | Transmission rate | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HAV | 104 PFU | 10 | After 20 min of drying 24% of input virus transferred (3483 PFU), after 4 h 1.6% (50 PFU) | [ |
| Norovirus | 150 µL contaminated fecal sample, 1:5 diluted in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) | 10 | 100% (positive samples after 1st-4th contact) 75% (positive samples after 5th-6th contact) 25% (positive samples after 7th contact) | [ |
| 100 µL 10% fecal suspension in PBS (106 PCR detectable units) on fingertip of glove, 1 h drying | Few | from left gloved hand 100% transfer, from right gloved hand 76% | [ | |
| Rhinovirus | 10 µL 104–105 PFU, 20 min drying | 5 | 0.7%-0.9% of inoculum (minimum 190 PFU) | [ |
| Rotavirus | 10 µL 10% fecal suspension in PBS (104–105 PFU), 20 or 60 min drying | 10 | 16.1% or 2.6% of inoculum | [ |
PFU plaque forming unit
Increase of alcohol blood level
| ABHR based on | Application | Median maximum blood level (mg/L) | Baseline (mg/L) for each alcohol [ | Increase above baseline | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol | 10 surgical hand rubs (each 3 min) within 80 min | 11 | 0.07 | 157-fold | [ |
| 1-Propanol 70% w/w | 18 | < 0.01 | > 1,800-fold | [ | |
| 2-Propanol 63% w/w | 10 | < 0.001 | > 10,000-fold |
Ethanol concentrations in the blood in relation to exposure according to [103]
| Exposure | Ethanol content in the formulation | Volunteers (n) | Median Baseline (mg/L) | Median maximum blood level (mg/L)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 applications of 4 ml hand rub within 30 min, each application 30 s (hygienic hand antisepsis) | 95% w/w (gel) | 12 | 0.11 | 20.95 |
| 85% | 12 | 0.07 | 11.45 | |
| 55% | 12 | 0.07 | 6.9 | |
| 10 applications of 4 ml hand rub, each application 3 min with 5 min break until next application (surgical hand preparation) | 95% w/w (gel) | 12 | 0.07 | 17.5 |
| 85% | 12 | 0.07 | 30.1 | |
| 55% | 12 | 0.07 | 8.8 |
aAfter the last application, the median ethanol concentration in peripheral blood increased gradually and peaked after 30 or 20 min; the highest median is given