ϟ
 
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000043
¤ OpenAccess: Gold
This work has “Gold” OA status. This means it is published in an Open Access journal that is indexed by the DOAJ.

Upper-Room Ultraviolet Light and Negative Air Ionization to Prevent Tuberculosis Transmission

A. Roderick Escombe,David Moore,Robert H. Gilman,Marcos Ñavincopa,Eduardo Ticona,Bailey W. Mitchell,Catherine Noakes,Cesar Javier Sepulveda Martinez,Patricia Sheen,R. Lama Ramirez,Willi Quino,Armando E. González,Jon S. Friedland,Carlton A. Evans

Medicine
Tuberculosis
Airborne transmission
2009
Background Institutional tuberculosis (TB) transmission is an important public health problem highlighted by the HIV/AIDS pandemic and the emergence of multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant TB. Effective TB infection control measures are urgently needed. We evaluated the efficacy of upper-room ultraviolet (UV) lights and negative air ionization for preventing airborne TB transmission using a guinea pig air-sampling model to measure the TB infectiousness of ward air. Methods and Findings For 535 consecutive days, exhaust air from an HIV-TB ward in Lima, Perú, was passed through three guinea pig air-sampling enclosures each housing approximately 150 guinea pigs, using a 2-d cycle. On UV-off days, ward air passed in parallel through a control animal enclosure and a similar enclosure containing negative ionizers. On UV-on days, UV lights and mixing fans were turned on in the ward, and a third animal enclosure alone received ward air. TB infection in guinea pigs was defined by monthly tuberculin skin tests. All guinea pigs underwent autopsy to test for TB disease, defined by characteristic autopsy changes or by the culture of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from organs. 35% (106/304) of guinea pigs in the control group developed TB infection, and this was reduced to 14% (43/303) by ionizers, and to 9.5% (29/307) by UV lights (both p < 0.0001 compared with the control group). TB disease was confirmed in 8.6% (26/304) of control group animals, and this was reduced to 4.3% (13/303) by ionizers, and to 3.6% (11/307) by UV lights (both p < 0.03 compared with the control group). Time-to-event analysis demonstrated that TB infection was prevented by ionizers (log-rank 27; p < 0.0001) and by UV lights (log-rank 46; p < 0.0001). Time-to-event analysis also demonstrated that TB disease was prevented by ionizers (log-rank 3.7; p = 0.055) and by UV lights (log-rank 5.4; p = 0.02). An alternative analysis using an airborne infection model demonstrated that ionizers prevented 60% of TB infection and 51% of TB disease, and that UV lights prevented 70% of TB infection and 54% of TB disease. In all analysis strategies, UV lights tended to be more protective than ionizers. Conclusions Upper-room UV lights and negative air ionization each prevented most airborne TB transmission detectable by guinea pig air sampling. Provided there is adequate mixing of room air, upper-room UV light is an effective, low-cost intervention for use in TB infection control in high-risk clinical settings.
Loading...
    Cite this:
Generate Citation
Powered by Citationsy*
    Upper-Room Ultraviolet Light and Negative Air Ionization to Prevent Tuberculosis Transmission” is a paper by A. Roderick Escombe David Moore Robert H. Gilman Marcos Ñavincopa Eduardo Ticona Bailey W. Mitchell Catherine Noakes Cesar Javier Sepulveda Martinez Patricia Sheen R. Lama Ramirez Willi Quino Armando E. González Jon S. Friedland Carlton A. Evans published in 2009. It has an Open Access status of “gold”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.