AI Article Synopsis

  • The 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak raised concerns about the transmission of viruses via contaminated surfaces (fomites), which has prompted ongoing studies into similar risks with COVID-19.
  • Researchers used the bacteriophage phi 6, which resembles human enveloped viruses, to simulate the persistence of Ebola and coronaviruses on various hospital surfaces under differing humidity levels.
  • The study found that phi 6 lasted longer than the Ebola virus on low-humidity surfaces, but coronaviruses sometimes lasted longer than phi 6, indicating that phi 6 may not be the best model for understanding coronavirus transmission risks.

Article Abstract

The infection of health care workers during the 2013 to 2016 Ebola outbreak raised concerns about fomite transmission. In the wake of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, investigations are ongoing to determine the role of fomites in coronavirus transmission as well. The bacteriophage phi 6 has a phospholipid envelope and is commonly used in environmental studies as a surrogate for human enveloped viruses. The persistence of phi 6 was evaluated as a surrogate for Ebola virus (EBOV) and coronaviruses on porous and nonporous hospital surfaces. Phi 6 was suspended in a body fluid simulant and inoculated onto 1-cm coupons of steel, plastic, and two fabric curtain types. The coupons were placed at two controlled absolute humidity (AH) levels: a low AH of 3.0 g/m and a high AH of 14.4 g/m Phi 6 declined at a lower rate on all materials under low-AH conditions, with a decay rate of 0.06-log PFU/day to 0.11-log PFU/day, than under the higher AH conditions, with a decay rate of 0.65-log PFU/h to 1.42-log PFU/day. There was a significant difference in decay rates between porous and nonporous surfaces at both low AH ( < 0.0001) and high AH ( < 0.0001). Under these laboratory-simulated conditions, phi 6 was found to be a conservative surrogate for EBOV under low-AH conditions in that it persisted longer than Ebola virus in similar AH conditions. Additionally, some coronaviruses persist longer than phi 6 under similar conditions; therefore, phi 6 may not be a suitable surrogate for coronaviruses. Understanding the persistence of enveloped viruses helps inform infection control practices and procedures in health care facilities and community settings. These data convey to public health investigators that enveloped viruses can persist and remain infective on surfaces, thus demonstrating a potential risk for transmission. Under these laboratory-simulated Western indoor hospital conditions, we assessed the suitability of phi 6 as a surrogate for environmental persistence research related to enveloped viruses, including EBOV and coronaviruses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7440805PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01482-20DOI Listing

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