Hydrogen Peroxide Vapor Technology Research Presented at IDSA Annual Meeting

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Hydrogen peroxide bio-decontamination technology is one of the hot topics at the 49th annual meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and the HIV Medicine Association. Three scientific abstracts are being presented on hydrogen peroxide vapor (HPV) at the meeting in Boston, Oct. 20-23, 2011.
 
Commenting on this latest research, James Salkeld, head of healthcare at Bioquell says, "Hydrogen peroxide vapor technology continues to have a strong profile among infection control professionals at all levels. Its efficacy at dealing with key healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) such as Clostridium difficile and Acinetobacter is becoming better known, providing a rapid solution to help in bringing outbreaks under control and reducing endemic infection."
 
The abstracts include reports of reducing endemic cases of Clostridium difficile and controlling outbreaks of Acinetobacter baumannii and NDM-1-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae.
 
Performed at the Wellstar group of hospitals in Atlanta, the first study illustrates a system-wide reduction in the incidence of C. difficile, VRE and MRSA following the introduction of a bundle of prevention and control measures including Bioquell's HPV proactive service (onsite equipment and bio-decontamination specialists). Here C. difficile rates fell by 36 percent, VRE by 68 percent and MRSA by 11 percent.
 
Management of a multi-year outbreak of Acinetobacter baumannii in an ICU setting was highlighted in the second study at Albany, NY. With the introduction of Bioquell HPV technology in 2010, rates dropped by 80 percent against baseline and 95 percent compared to the peak of the outbreak. Prior to the HPV technology, standard infection control methods had failed to bring the outbreaks under control. Whilst the introduction of surveillance cultures made some impact, implementation of HPV technology solved the problem.
 
The third study was conducted at a Howard County Hospital, affiliated with Johns Hopkins, MD. Although NDM-1-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae was not found in the environment during the study, the team decided to use Bioquell HPV technology to disinfect the patient care area. Such treatment is vital when dealing with some of the hard to treat Gram-negatives.
 
The three abstracts are titled:
- A System-Wide Reduction in the Incidence of C. difficile and MDROs due to an Infection Prevention & Control Bundle
- Management of a multi-year MDR Acinetobacter baumannii outbreak in the ICU setting
- Management of a New Delhi Metallo-beta-lactamase-1 enzyme (NDM-1)-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae : Infection Control and Medical Implications

 

 

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