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Five Ways to Cope When Masks Run Low

— New CDC guidance offers options on reuse, decontamination -- and no, don't use home ovens or tanning beds

MedpageToday
An illustration of a homemade protective mask with a needle and spool of thread

With hospitals in coronavirus hotspots struggling to preserve personal protective equipment (PPE), ľֱ spoke with experts in engineering, medicine, and infection prevention on ways to extend their supply and use.

Infection preventionists spend their days "frantically searching" for PPE, teaching clinicians how to reuse masks and gowns or how to create their own, said Ann Marie Pettis, RN, BSN, president-elect of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) during a last week.

"This goes against everything we have known from the scientific evidence and what we have always taught our staff," Pettis said.

An APIC released on March 27 found that among 1,140 infection preventionists across the U.S., 20% reported that their facilities have no respirators and another 28% are almost out of them. Roughly half of respondents were also almost or completely out of face shields.

That has prompted healthcare professionals and the agencies offering guidance to look hard at ways to make available supplies last longer and, in extreme situations, for workers to fabricate their own gear. In many facilities, it's simply impossible to put on a new, fresh-from-the-box mask for every patient encounter. That means wearing them longer and/or decontaminating them.

Option 1: Extended Wear, Reuse

The fall into three categories: conventional, contingency, and crisis.

Already many hospitals in the contingency and crisis stages are implementing policies of extended use or limited reuse.

Kathleen Aumann Morales, PhD, RN, CNE, of Berry College in Georgia, said on a hosted by that she has heard of nurses getting one mask per day, per week, or even every 2 weeks. Some nurses wear surgical masks over their N95 respirators to make them last longer, she noted.

In issued Tuesday, the agency pointed to studies demonstrating that the virus that causes COVID-19 can live on plastic, stainless steel, and cardboard surfaces for up to 72 hours.

The agency then suggested a passive decontamination strategy of sorts: issuing five respirators to each healthcare worker seeing COVID-19 patients. The worker wears each mask in the same order and places it in a paper bag at the end of the day. If done correctly, there should be a minimum of 5 days between each respirator's repeat use, the guidance notes.

But reuse, a "contingency capacity strategy," is not without risks: "There is perhaps something worse than no mask, and that would be self-inoculation," said Larry Chu, MD, MS, director of the Anesthesia Informatics and Media (AIM) Lab at Stanford University Medical Center in California.

It's easy to imagine a clinician unknowingly placing a mask that's been stuffed in a pocket or bag and become contaminated with the COVID-19 virus up against his or her face, Chu told ľֱ. "If we remove a mask ... it may be safest to only replace it with a clean or disinfected mask," he said. (Chu emphasized that healthcare workers should always comply with their hospitals' policies and that his views are not necessarily those of Stanford Medicine.)

"Extended use is probably the safest way to go," particularly for those in a designated COVID unit, Pettis told ľֱ.

In its guidance, CDC reminds workers who reuse masks to treat respirators as though they are contaminated. Wearers should wash their hands with soap and water, use clean gloves when donning and performing seal checks, and inspect the respirator to ensure there's no damage, particularly to the straps, nose bridge, and nose foam material, and to always avoid touching the inside of the respirator.

Pettis also noted that unused respirators that have passed the expiration dates on their labels can be used, per the CDC.

"Realistically, a lot of times expiration dates are over-cautious," she said.

But if a respirator is "compromised" or if a seal check fails, the respirator should be discarded and replaced, the CDC advised.

Decontamination

Decontamination is in a kind of "Wild, Wild West" phase, Pettis said.

Despite there being no CDC-approved method for decontamination, the agency said ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI), vaporous hydrogen peroxide (VHP), and moist heat have shown "the most promise" as methods for decontaminating respirators.

The CDC warned that decontamination and subsequent reuse is a "crisis capacity strategy" because it may diminish a respirators' level of protection, a CDC spokesperson told ľֱ via email.

Changes to the respirator could reduce its filtration efficiency, its breathability, or "degrade the straps, nose bridge material, or strap attachments," which could in turn affect how well a respirator fits, the spokesperson noted.

There isn't specific data to support the efficacy of decontamination against the COVID-19 virus right now on respirators, and more research will be needed to confirm that the virus is "inactivated," noted the CDC.

The FDA issued on March 29 explaining that during this public health emergency, the agency "does not intend to object to the distribution and use of sterilizers, disinfectant devices, and air purifiers that are intended to be effective at killing SARS-CoV-2 [the virus that causes COVID-19] ... FDA believes such devices will not create such an undue risk, when performance and labeling criteria are met."

Option 2: Ultraviolet Light

John Lowe, PhD, of the University of Nebraska Medical Center College in Omaha, designed .

The process works like this: Bags of used masks are transported to a room inside the university's medical center fitted with two ultraviolet light towers. The respirators are labeled with the wearer's first initial, last name, and the date of first use, and the paper bags are similarly labeled with the wearer's full name and the unit to which the respirators should be returned.

The respirators are hung on wires across the room and decontaminated when the UV light towers are turned on. Afterwards, the respirators are returned to the original wearer.

Chu and Amy Price, DPhil, of Stanford Medicine, who recently confirmed that UVGI was "safe and effective" in the models tested. (Chu noted that Stanford's AIM Lab COVID-19 Evidence Service Report is not intended to advocate for any product or service.)

But Pettis said that while ultraviolet germicidal irradiation may be relatively "tried and true," it's not an easy process: Light must reach every part of the mask and absorption levels have to be monitored, she explained, noting that her hospital, Highland Hospital of the University of Rochester in New York, has chosen hydrogen vapor peroxide instead.

"Process-wise, it was just easier and we had more confidence in the hydrogen peroxide vapor getting into everything that needed to be decontaminated," Pettis said.

William Anderson, of the University of Waterloo Faculty of Engineering in Ontario, said on the TIPS webinar that UV radiation doesn't appear to harm the respirator's capacity for filtration.

Still, he said, the buildup of material as masks are used and reused could potentially make breathing more difficult.

Anderson said he was not sure how many decontamination cycles the process would allow per respirator, but Morales guessed an upper limit of five.

Option 3: Vaporous Hydrogen Peroxide

Battelle Labs, a Columbus, Ohio-based nonprofit, received an from the FDA on March 28 to decontaminate N95 respirators for reuse using a VHP procedure that calls for 2.5 hours of exposure to concentrated gases and a maximum of 20 decontamination cycles per respirator.

VHP decontamination showed "minimal effect" on filtration efficacy and demonstrated "99.9999% efficiency in killing bacterial spores" and similar efficacy against bacteriophage viruses, the CDC noted in its guidance.

But the elastic bands themselves can degrade after about 30 cycles, Anderson pointed out, citing an earlier FDA report on the .

Anderson said that although some studies note concerns of hydrogen peroxide residue on respirators, as long as enough time is allotted for off-gassing, he does not anticipate a problem.

Overall, he called it a "feasible approach," but expressed concerns about throughput for VHP systems that hospitals already have on site, which may take "multiple hours per batch."

Battelle's system, a "scaled-up version of VHP," can handle "quite a few masks, but deployment may take a while," he added in a follow-up email. Battelle is currently processing N95 respirator masks for OhioHealth. In addition, Stony Brook University Hospital in New York has plans to begin using Battelle's Critical Care Decontamination System, which can disinfect up to 80,000 masks in a day, a spokesperson for the university said in an email.

Option 4: Heat

A third method of decontamination, moist heat, has been studied at 60°C and 80% relative humidity. In one study, it only minimally reduced filtration and fit of the respirator, , while in a second it led to a "99.99% reduction" in H1N1 influenza virus. One drawback from this method is the uncertainty around its ability to disinfect different pathogens, the agency noted.

In addition, Yi Cui, PhD, of Stanford University, and colleagues have suggesting that, although different, use of dry heat around 75°C for 30 minutes can also decontaminate N95 respirators and maintain filtration efficiency over several cycles.

But that process will require more research before it can be confirmed, he noted.

The CDC's guidance found that decontamination with 160° C dry heat reduced the efficacy of the N95 filter and "did not meet the levels that NIOSH [the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health] would allow for approval," but this is twice the temperature Cui's team studied.

The CDC guidance also noted that decontamination with an autoclave, 70% isopropyl alcohol, microwave irradiation, and soap and water resulted in "significant filter degradation."

What Not to Do

While the PPE shortages have encouraged clinicians to be innovative, experts shared certain do's and don'ts:

  • Do not bake a respirator in a home oven, Chu warned, as it could expose the wearer and others to the virus
  • Do not use tanning lamps or nail dryers as a source of UV radiation, Anderson said, explaining that those lamps typically use UVA radiation that have a longer wavelength and do less damage to pathogens
  • Do not randomly redistribute decontaminated respirators; clinicians should write their names on their masks and each hospital should have a system to ensure they are returned to the appropriate owner, said Chu. Masks are disinfected but not cleaned. Not only is it "disconcerting" to receive a mask with someone else's lipstick on it, the process may have eliminated the COVID-19 virus without inactivating all other microbes

Option 5: Homemade Substitute

As a last resort, homemade masks are "better than nothing," Morales said, but they're more effective at "keeping the germ in than keeping the germ out."

Chu and his colleagues assessed using everything from vacuum cleaner bags to cotton T-shirts.

But as Cui pointed out, it would be impossible for a layperson to make "a high efficiency mask" with these materials.

At Pettis' hospital, homemade masks are given to outsiders visiting patients or confirmed COVID-19 patients who are being sent home. The masks are laundered, of course, and could in the future be used by clinicians to make their own N95s last longer.

"Could we get to the point where we do have to use them for the staff? We could," she admitted. "After this is all over, I think there will be a lot of soul-searching to figure out how to improve and prevent some of the issues that we're facing right now."