Heat And Humidity For Bioburden Reduction Of N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators

Loïc Anderegg,John Doyle,Margaret L. Gardel,Amit Gupta,Christian Hallas,Yuri Lensky,Nancy G. Love,Bronwyn A. Lucas,Edward Mazenc,Cole Meisenhelder,Ajay Pillarisetti,Daniel Ranard, Allison H. Squires, Jessica Vechakul,Nathaniel B. Vilas,Stuart Williams,Daniel Wilson,Tyler N. Chen, Miral Abbas, James Agalloc,Poonam Agarwal, Carlo Alberto Amadei,Nicolas Altemose,Nathan Alves, Katherine Andrews, Tom Baer,Halleh Balch,Samhita Banavar, Yicheng Bao, Sumner Barenberg,Ashvind Bawa,Arnab Bhattacharya, Antara Raaghavi Bhattacharya,Felicity Billings, Daniel Blair,Juan Blanco-Morillo, Nicky Blobel, Ruparelia Chandrakant, Flora Chen,Tyler Chen, Kezi Cheng, Chris Chidsey,Avilash Cramer,Yoshika Crider, Jill Crittenden, Kieran Culligan, Camille Cunin, Sabina de los Diaz,Xuelai (Shelly) Dong,Siddharth Doshi, Hana El-Samad, Mazzin Elsamaloty, Christina Fast,Eliott Flaum, Brian Fleischer,Kevin Fu,Margaret Gardel,Alisha Geldert, Joly Ghanawi, Peter Girguis,Anjali Gopal,Samantha Grist, Rebecca Hamilton, Matthias Hernandez,Amy Herr,Stella Hines,Grace Hu, Sonia Iosim, Irina Lebedeva,Andrea Jacobo, Kyle Kessler,Nikita Khlystov, Minsoo Kim, Marcy Konja,Shailabh Kumar,Laura Kwong, Daniel Lee,Roger LeMesurier, Larissa Little, Jason Liu,Amanda Loutris,Nancy Love, Jenny Mao, Lydia Marik,Simone Marini, Brie Martin, Joanne Mathew, Karina Mondragon-Shem, Orhun Muratoglu, Dhanya Nambiar,Fran Nargi, Adam Okada,Jassi Pannu,Lalitha Parameswaran,Claudia Paredes-Esquivel,Helen Pitchik,Deborah Plana, Clare Ploucha,Manu Prakash, Andrew Preecha, Rajan Puri, Ann Quaicoe,Sara Rampazzi, Tyler Ray, Bryan Reid,David Rempel, David Robinowitz, Jaspal Sandhu, Walter Schneider, Nexus Sea,Jared Shless, Sylvia Smullin, Ari Solomon,Nichole Starr, Ashley Styczynski,Alison Su, Selena Sun, Catherine Tang, Rachel Tham,Maryann C. Tung,Nathaniel Vilas, Winnie Wang,Thomas G Weiser, Derek Wetmore, Robert Wilson,Helen Yang

APPLIED BIOSAFETY(2021)

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摘要
Introduction: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has caused a global shortage of single-use N95 filtering facepiece respirators (FFRs). A combination of heat and humidity is a promising method for N95 FFR decontamination in crisis-capacity conditions; however, an understanding of its effect on viral inactivation and N95 respirator function is crucial to achieving effective decontamination.Objective: We reviewed the scientific literature on heat-based methods for decontamination of N95 FFRs contaminated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and viral analogues. We identified key parameters for SARS-CoV-2 bioburden reduction while preserving N95 fit and filtration, as well as methods that are likely ineffective.Key Findings: Viral inactivation by humid heat is highly sensitive to temperature, humidity, duration of exposure, and the local microenvironment (e.g., dried saliva). A process that achieves temperatures of 70-85 degrees C and relative humidity >50% for at least 30 min is likely to inactivate SARS-CoV-2 (>3-log reduction) on N95 respirators while maintaining fit and filtration efficiency for three to five cycles. Dry heat is significantly less effective. Microwave-generated steam is another promising approach, although less studied, whereas 121 degrees C autoclave treatments may damage some N95 FFRs. Humid heat will not inactivate all microorganisms, so reprocessed N95 respirators should be reused only by the original user.Conclusions: Effective bioburden reduction on N95 FFRs during the COVID-19 pandemic requires inactivation of SARS-CoV-2 and preservation of N95 fit and filtration. The literature suggests that humid heat protocols can achieve effective bioburden reduction. Proper industrial hygiene, biosafety controls, and clear protocols are required to reduce the risks of N95 reprocessing and reuse.
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关键词
decontamination, N95, respirator, heat, humidity, steam
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