Abstract
Background and study aims Flexible endoscopes are potential vectors of pathogen transmission to patients that
are subjected to cleaning and high-level disinfection after each procedure. Efficient
manual cleaning is a prerequisite for effective high-level disinfection. The goal
of this study was to demonstrate the impact of the cleaning chemistry in the outcome
of the manual cleaning of endoscopes.
Materials and methods Twelve endoscopes were included in this study: four colonoscopes, four gastroscopes,
two duodenoscopes and two bronchoscopes. This study was designed with two phases;
in each of them, the manual cleaning procedure remained identical, but a different
detergent was used: a non-enzymatic detergent-disinfectant (NEDD) and an enzymatic
detergent (ED). Biopsy and suction channels of endoscopes were sampled using 10 mL
of physiological saline at two points: before and after manual cleaning, and adenosine
triphosphate (ATP) was measured on each sample. In total, 208 procedures were analyzed
for the NEDD phase and 253 for the ED phase.
Results For each endoscope type, cleaning endoscopes with ED resulted in larger median decrease
in ATP than with NEDD: respectively 99.43 % and 95.95 % for bronchoscopes (P = 0.0007), 99.28 % and 96.93 % for colonoscopes (P < 0.0001) and 98.36 % and 95.36 % for gastroscopes (P < 0.0001). In addition, acceptability rates of endoscopes based on defined post-manual
cleaning ATP thresholds (200, 150, 100 or 50 relative light units) for all endoscope
types were significantly higher with ED compared to NEDD.
Conclusions With all other parameters of manual cleaning remaining unchanged, the enzymatic chemistry
of ED provided more consistent and improved cleaning of endoscopes compared to NEDD.
Therefore, choice of the detergent for endoscope cleaning has an impact on the outcome
of this process.