Evaluation of peracetic acid fog for the inactivation of Bacillus anthracis spore surrogates in a large decontamination chamber

► Study characterizes process and efficacy of PAA fog to inactivate bacterial spores. ► Method to deposit spores onto decontamination chamber surfaces was effective. ► The maximum decontamination efficacy achieved with PAA fog was 4.78 log reduction. ► Fogging of PAA has potential as a relatively ea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2013-04, Vol.250-251, p.61-67
Hauptverfasser: Wood, Joseph P., Calfee, Michael Worth, Clayton, Matthew, Griffin-Gatchalian, Nicole, Touati, Abderrahmane, Egler, Kim
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► Study characterizes process and efficacy of PAA fog to inactivate bacterial spores. ► Method to deposit spores onto decontamination chamber surfaces was effective. ► The maximum decontamination efficacy achieved with PAA fog was 4.78 log reduction. ► Fogging of PAA has potential as a relatively easy to use decontamination technology. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the sporicidal (inactivation of bacterial spores) effectiveness and operation of a fogging device utilizing peracetic acid/hydrogen peroxide (PAA). Experiments were conducted in a pilot-scale 24m3 stainless steel chamber using either biological indicators (BIs) or bacterial spores deposited onto surfaces via aerosolization. Wipe sampling was used to recover aerosol-deposited spores from chamber surfaces and coupon materials before and after fogging to assess decontamination efficacy. Temperature, relative humidity, and hydrogen peroxide vapor levels were measured during testing to characterize the fog environment. The fog completely inactivated all BIs in a test using a 60mL solution of PAA (22% hydrogen peroxide/4.5% peracetic acid). In tests using aerosol-deposited bacterial spores, the majority of the post-fogging spore levels per sample were less than 1 log colony forming units, with a number of samples having no detectable spores. In terms of decontamination efficacy, a 4.78 log reduction of viable spores was achieved on wood and stainless steel. Fogging of PAA solutions shows potential as a relatively easy to use decontamination technology in the event of contamination with Bacillus anthracis or other spore-forming infectious disease agents, although additional research is needed to enhance sporicidal efficacy.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2013.01.068