Microorganisms, Vol. 12, Pages 2369: Regulatory Standard for Determining Preoperative Skin Preparation Efficacy Underreports True Dermal Bioburden in a Porcine Model

Fecha de publicación: 20/11/2024
Fuente: Microorganisms - Revista científica (MDPI)
Microorganisms, Vol. 12, Pages 2369: Regulatory Standard for Determining Preoperative Skin Preparation Efficacy Underreports True Dermal Bioburden in a Porcine Model
Microorganisms doi: 10.3390/microorganisms12112369
Authors:
Hannah R. Duffy
Nicholas N. Ashton
Abbey Blair
Nathanael Hooper
Porter Stulce
Dustin L. Williams

Medical device companies and regulatory bodies rely on a nondestructive bacterial sampling technique specified by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM E1173-15) to test preoperative skin preparations (PSPs). Despite the widespread use of PSPs, opportunistic skin-flora pathogens remain the most significant contributor to surgical site infections, suggesting that the ASTM testing standard may be underreporting true dermal bioburden. We hypothesized that ASTM E1173-15 may fail to capture deep skin-dwelling flora. To test this hypothesis, we applied ASTM E1173-15 and a full-thickness skin sampling technique, which we established previously through application to the backs of seven pigs (Yorkshire/Landrace hybrid) following a clinically used PSP (4% chlorhexidine gluconate). The results showed that samples quantified using the full-thickness skin method consistently cultured more bacteria than the ASTM standard, which principally targeted surface-dwelling bacteria. Following PSP, the ASTM standard yielded 1.05 ± 0.24 log10 CFU/cm2, while the full-thickness tissue method resulted in 3.24 ± 0.24 log10 CFU/cm2, more than a 2 log10 difference (p < 0.001). Immunofluorescence images corroborated the data, showing that Staphylococcus epidermidis was present in deep skin regions with or without PSP treatment. Outcomes suggested that a full-thickness sampling technique may better evaluate PSP technologies as it resolves bioburdens dwelling in deeper skin regions.