Efficacy of cleaning, disinfection, and sterilization modalities for addressing infectious drug-resistant fungi: a review.

J Appl Microbiol

Centre for Sustainable Disinfection and Sterilization, Technological University of the Shannon, Athlone Campus, Co. Westmeath, N37 HD68, Ireland.

Published: January 2025

This is a timely and important review that focuses on the appropriateness of established cleaning, disinfection, and sterilization methods to safely and effectively address infectious fungal drug-resistant pathogens that can potentially contaminate reusable medical devices used in healthcare environment in order to mitigate the risk of patient infection. The release of the World Health Organization (WHO) fungal priority pathogen list (FPPL) in 2022 highlighted the public health crisis of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in clinically relevant fungal species. Contamination of medical devices with drug-resistant fungal pathogens (including those on the FPPL) in healthcare is a rare event that is more likely to occur due to cross-transmission arising from lapses in hand hygiene practices. Established disinfection and sterilization methods decontaminate fungal pathogens on single-use and reusable medical devices; however, there are assumptions that reusable devices destined for semi-critical use are appropriately cleaned and do not harbour biofilms that may undermine the ability to effectively decontamination these type devices in healthcare. International standards dictate that manufacturer's instructions for use must provide appropriate guidance to healthcare facilities to meet safe reprocessing expectations that include addressing drug-resistant fungal pathogens. Increased environmental monitoring and vigilance surrounding fungal pathogens in healthcare is advised, including adherence to hand hygiene/aseptic practices and appropriate cleaning encompassing the simplification of reusable device features for 'ease-of-reach'. There are emereging opportunities to promote a more integrated multiactor hub approach to addressing these sophisticated challenges, including future use of artificial intelligence and machine learning for improved diagnostics, monitoring/surveillance (such as healthcare and wastewater-based epidemiology), sterility assurance, and device design. There is a knowledge gap surrounding the occurrence and potential persistence of drug-resistant fungal pathogens harboured in biofilms, particularly for ascertaining efficacy of high-level disinfection for semi-critical use devices.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jambio/lxaf005DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

fungal pathogens
20
disinfection sterilization
12
medical devices
12
drug-resistant fungal
12
cleaning disinfection
8
sterilization methods
8
fungal
8
reusable medical
8
devices healthcare
8
pathogens
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!