Background: The exposure of healthcare workers (HCW) to fecal-orally transmitted pathogens like hepatitis E Virus (HEV), or is still not known. The potential risk for employees or patients to acquire these infections through asymptomatic infected healthcare personnel has not yet been studied. Physicians and nurses in gastroenterology working in endoscopic workspaces were recruited. Employees from cardiology, presumed to possess a lower exposure, served as controls. The cytomegalovirus (CMV) seroprevalence was analyzed as a control pathogen without fecal-oral route of transmission. This study provides an objective view onto the potential exposure risk for HCW and patients in endoscopic workspaces. We hypothesize that HCW in gastroenterological endoscopy show a higher seroprevalence for fecal-oral pathogens like HEV, and compared to HCW in cardiology.
Objective: Primary objective was the assessment of antibody titers against HEV, and in serum of HCW from gastroenterological endoscopy as well as cardiology. As a secondary objective we analyzed the seroprevalence against CMV.
Methods: 65 HCW were from gastroenterological endoscopy (n=42) and cardiology (n=23) in three medical centers in the German federal states of Brandenburg, Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein and were prospectively studied. Antibody titers were determined via ELISA in serum.
Results: HCW in gastroenterological endoscopy showed a significantly higher seroprevalence for IgG (19.1 %) compared to HCW from the field of cardiology (8.7 %; p=0.04). IgA titers against were negligible. HEV seroprevalence for IgG did not differ significantly between HCW in gastroenterological endoscopy (7.1 %) and cardiology (8.7 %), respectively. IgA and IgM titers against HEV were also negligible. All other antibody titers against CMV and showed no significant difference.
Conclusions: Only seroprevalence was significantly increased in HCW from the field of gastroenterological endoscopy. HEV seroprevalence showed no differences. The results for CMV and were without pathological findings. However, there is no elevated risk for HEV exposure in medical staff working at an endoscopy unit, but for the protective measures might need to be improved.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1833-8917 | DOI Listing |
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