Disinfection and Cleaning of Heater–Cooler Units: Suspension- and Biofilm-Killing
Background
Non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) infections in cardiac surgery patients, caused by Mycobacterium chimaera or Mycobacterium abscessus, have been traced to NTM-aerosols produced by heater–cooler units of cardiopulmonary bypass equipment.
Aim
To develop a protocol to disinfect the water reservoir(s) of heater–coolers to reduce NTM numbers and thereby prevent potential NTM aerosolization; and to devise an approach to disrupt surface biofilms of heater–coolers to reduce reinoculation of the heater–cooler reservoir(s) after disinfection.
Methods
A laboratory-scale Centers for Disease Control and Prevention bioreactor and a heater–cooler were inoculated with M. chimaera or M. abscessus to measure the ability of different disinfection protocols to reduce NTM colony-forming units in water and biofilm samples and to delay the reappearance of NTM after disinfection.
Findings
The combination of an enzyme detergent cleaning agent and Clorox® were equivalent to Clorox alone in reducing M. chimaera cfu in heater–cooler water reservoir samples. However, reappearance of those bacteria was delayed by 12 weeks by the combination of enzyme detergent cleaning agent and Clorox exposure compared to Clorox disinfection alone.
Conclusion
A combination of an enzyme detergent and Clorox was an effective disinfection treatment and significantly delayed the reappearance of M. chimaera in the heater–cooler reservoir.