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Home Methods Statements The
Liver
Hepatitis C & Reused Lancets
FINGER BLOOD SAMPLE DEVICE COULD SPREAD HCV.
Salvatore P. Dibenedetto, Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology,
University of Catania, Catania, Italy.
Hepatitis Weekly, 04-22-1996, pp 11.
Taking blood samples from the finger with a nondisposable device can result in the transmission of hepatitis C virus, according to a report from Italy. The report is the first to implicate routine finger blood sampling in the spread of hepatitis C virus (HCV), and researcher Salvatore P. Dibenedetto and colleagues recommend the suspension of such practices. Advances in blood-banking techniques have reduced the incidence of infection by HCV, which accounts for most cases of non-A, non-B post transfusional hepatitis, but such infections have not been completely eliminated.
"Screening of blood donors by second generation HCV specific assays has been widely reported to reduce rates of postransfusion infection from about 7 to 17 percent to as little as 0.3 to 0.05 percent of units transfused. Nevertheless outbreaks of HCV infection have been reported in hematology wards, suggesting a role for routes other than transfusions in transmission of the infection,"
Dibenedetto et al. wrote ("Reduction in the Incidence of Infection by HCV in Children with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia After Suspension of Sampling from the Finger," The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, March 1996;15(3):265-266). "Furthermore, children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and/or other malignancies seem to be exposed more frequently than others to the risk of such infections."
In this study Dibenedetto et al. describe their experience in an outpatient hematology-oncology clinic for children. A total of 144 patients from newborn to 14 years of age, with newly diagnosed non-B cell acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) were admitted to the Catania, Italy hospital between January 1986 and December 1994. Before December 1989, all patients with ALL received blood products that had not been screened for HCV. Thereafter second generation tests for HCV were routinely conducted in the blood bank for screening of donated blood.
Starting in January 1990, all patients were examined for the presence of HCV specific antibodies at the time of first admission to the hospital and then every three months thereafter, during maintenance therapy in the post-remission phase. In patients diagnosed with ALL before January 1990, the presence of HCV specific antibodies was examined during maintenance therapy or during routine follow-up after cessation of therapy. Since September 1992, in view of an unexpectedly persistent high incidence of HCV infection, Dibenedetto et al. stopped sampling the blood of their outpatients with a finger-pricking device (a pencil with a spring- loaded disposable lancet).
"The finger stick procedure was performed by personnel who were informed of the proper use of the device as well as on the general precautions to prevent contamination," the researchers wrote. "Nevertheless the frequency with which gloves were worn varied among the operators. By contrast lancets were changed routinely between patients and the underside of the device was cleaned after each lancet was discharged. "All sera, which had been stored frozen at -20 degrees centigrade, were tested by a second generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay specific for HCV (ELISA-2; Ortho Diagnostic Systems, Raritan, N.J.) and reactive sera were further examined by a second generation RIBA. Antibodies specific for HCV were detected in 28 (20.1 percent) of 141 transfused children and in one of three untransfused children with ALL who had been diagnosed between January 1986, and December 1994. Because the latter one child had been diagnosed as having ALL in July 1987, the authors do not know whether or not he was seropositive at the time of first admission to the hospital. The analysis was extended to his family and his father turned out to be seropositive for HCV.
Thirty-eight patients had been diagnosed before January, 1990 (the date of introduction of routine assays for HCV). These children had previously received unscreened blood or platelets. Twelve of them (31.5 percent) were seropositive for HCV. "The detrimental effects of blood sampling from the finger with this device were particularly evident in children with ALL who had undergone weekly or biweekly blood cell counts as outpatients for a prolonged period,"
Dibenedetto et al. wrote. "By contrast, patients with neoplasms other than ALL who occasionally and for short periods underwent such blood sampling as our outpatients were usually unaffected. This difference might reflect a requirement of multiple exposures over a long period of time of the transmission of HCV by routes other than the parenteral administration of blood products."
Transmission of Hepatitis B
Virus Among Persons Undergoing Blood Glucose Monitoring in
Long-Term--Care Facilities --- Mississippi, North Carolina, and Los
Angeles County, California, 2003--2004
Regular monitoring of blood glucose levels is an important
component of routine diabetes care (1). Capillary blood is
typically sampled with the use of a fingerstick device and tested
with a portable glucometer. Because of outbreaks of hepatitis B
virus (HBV) infections associated with glucose monitoring, CDC and
the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have recommended since 1990
that fingerstick devices be restricted to individual use (2,3).
This report describes three recent outbreaks of HBV infection among
residents in long-term--care (LTC) facilities that were attributed
to shared devices and other breaks in infection-control practices
related to blood glucose monitoring. Findings from these
investigations and previous reports suggest that recommendations
concerning standard precautions and the reuse of fingerstick devices
have not been adhered to or enforced consistently in LTC settings (2--5).
The findings underscore the need for education, training, adherence
to standard precautions, and specific infection-control
recommendations targeting diabetes-care procedures in LTC settings (4--6)
(Box 1).
The three outbreaks described in this report were all reported by
state or local health departments to CDC, which provided
epidemiologic and laboratory assistance. In each of the three LTC
settings, residents were tested for serologic markers for HBV
infection. Under the case definitions used in these investigations,
residents who tested positive for IgM antibody to hepatitis B core
antigen (anti-HBc) were defined as having acute HBV infection.
Residents who tested positive for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)
and total anti-HBc, but who tested negative for IgM anti-HBc, were
considered to have chronic HBV infection. Residents who tested
positive for total anti-HBc, but who tested negative for HBsAg, or
those who had antibody to HBsAg (anti-HBs) >10 milli-International
Units (mIU) per milliliter were considered immune to HBV infection.
Residents were considered susceptible to HBV if they had no HBV
markers. A retrospective cohort study was performed as part of each
investigation; the study was restricted to acutely infected and
susceptible residents to identify risk factors. In all three
investigations, staff members were evaluated; none were identified
as sources of infection. Medical records were reviewed and
infection-control procedures were assessed through direct
observation and by interviews with nursing staff members.
Nursing Home A, Mississippi
During November--December 2003, the Mississippi Department of
Health received reports of two fatal cases of acute HBV infection
among residents of nursing home A. The first patient with recognized
symptoms of HBV infection had received serologic testing for viral
hepatitis infection in June 2003 as part of a hospital emergency
department evaluation for abdominal pain. Although this patient was
found to have a positive test for IgM anti-HBc, indicating acute HBV
infection, and the finding was noted in the patient's chart in
September 2003, nursing home A did not contact the state health
department or initiate an internal investigation. Subsequently, the
patient died.
In December 2003, after a second patient with acute HBV infection
had died, and after a third with acute HBV infection was reported,
serologic testing was performed on specimens from all 158 residents.
Test results were available for 160 residents, including the two
decedents; 15 (9%) had acute HBV infection, one was chronically
infected, 15 (9%) were immune, and 129 (81%) were susceptible.
Percutaneous and other possible exposures among residents were
evaluated. Among 38 residents who routinely received fingersticks
for glucose monitoring, 14 had acute HBV infection, compared with
one of 106 residents who did not receive fingersticks (relative risk
[RR] = 39.0; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 5.3--290.0).
Glucose monitoring of 14 residents with acute HBV infection and
the resident with chronic HBV infection was performed by staff
members based at the same nursing station. Reviews of
infection-control practices and site inspections indicated that each
of the four nursing stations in nursing home A was equipped with one
glucometer and one spring-loaded, pen-like fingerstick device. Staff
members reported that a new end cap and lancet assembly was used for
each fingerstick procedure; however, the spring-loaded barrel and
glucometer were not routinely cleaned between patients.
Investigators also observed that insulin and other multidose
medication vials were not labeled with patient names or the dates
the vials were opened. In an anonymous survey, several staff members
reported observing other workers reuse a needle or lancet or fail to
change gloves between patients. No other percutaneous exposures were
associated with illness.
Assisted Living Center B, Los Angeles County, California
During January--February 2004, the Los Angeles County Department
of Health Services received reports of four residents with diabetes
in assisted living center B who had acute HBV infection during
November 2003--January 2004. Because these initial reports were
among residents with diabetes, serologic testing was performed in
January 2004 on residents who had received fingersticks for blood
glucose monitoring during May--December 2003. Of 22 residents tested
(three declined), eight (36%) had acute HBV infection, including the
four residents previously identified; six (27%) were immune (and
excluded from the analysis), and none had chronic infection. Reviews
of patient records indicated that one of the acutely infected
residents had been repeatedly tested at a separate hemodialysis
center and had seroconverted to HBsAg-positive in July 2003. Of the
nine patients who had daily exposure to fingerstick procedures
performed by nursing staff, eight had acute HBV infection, compared
with none among the seven residents who performed their own
fingersticks (RR = undefined; CI = 2.8--undefined). Although receipt
of insulin was also significantly associated with infection, two
residents with acute HBV infection had not received insulin. Other
percutaneous exposures (e.g., podiatric or dental care) were not
associated with HBV infection.
Fingerstick procedures were often performed by nursing staff
members in a central living area, with diabetes patients seated at a
common table. Although residents had their own fingerstick devices,
nurses reported occasionally using a pen-like fingerstick device
barrel from their own kits to collect consecutive blood samples; a
single glucometer was typically used for all residents. Nurses
reported that they were discouraged from wearing gloves to decrease
the sense of a clinical environment, and hand hygiene was not
performed between procedures.
Nursing Home C, North Carolina
In May 2003, a case of HBV infection in a resident of nursing
home C was reported to the North Carolina Department of Health.
During June--July 2003, serologic testing was performed on specimens
from all 192 residents; 11 (6%) had acute HBV infection, 16 (8%)
were immune, and 165 (86%) were susceptible. No resident had chronic
HBV infection. Of 45 residents who received fingersticks for glucose
monitoring, eight (18%) had acute HBV infection, compared with three
(3%) of 117 residents without this exposure (RR = 6.9; CI =
1.9--25.0). After data were controlled for fingerstick exposures,
acute HBV infection was not associated with other percutaneous
exposures (e.g., insulin injections, podiatry procedures, or
phlebotomy). Two diabetes patients at nursing home C who were
potential sources of the outbreak were identified retrospectively;
one had clinical symptoms of hepatitis B and serologic markers of
acute infection during 2002, whereas the other had chronic HBV
infection and died in February 2002.
Interviews with staff and direct observation of
glucose-monitoring practices revealed that only single-use lancets
were used, and insulin vials were not shared among patients.
However, on each wing of the facility, a single glucometer was used
for all patients receiving fingersticks; glucometers were not
routinely cleaned between patients. On some days, a single
health-care worker performed approximately 20 fingerstick procedures
during a single work shift. In an anonymous survey, nursing staff
members indicated that some health-care workers did not always
change gloves between patients when performing fingerstick
procedures.
Reported by: R Webb, MD, M Currier, MD, J Weir, KM
McNeill, MD, Mississippi Dept of Health. E Bancroft, MD, D Dassey,
MD, J Maynard, D Terashita, MD, Los Angeles County Dept of Health
Svcs, California. K Simeonsson, MD, A Chelminski, J Engel, MD, North
Carolina Dept of Health and Human Svcs. JF Perz, DrPH, AE Fiore, MD,
IT Williams, PhD, BP Bell, MD, Div of Viral Hepatitis, National
Center for Infectious Diseases; T Harrington, MD, C Wheeler, MD, EIS
officers, CDC.
Editorial Note:
Lack of adherence to standard precautions and failure to
implement long-standing recommendations against sharing fingerstick
devices place LTC residents at risk for acquiring infections from
bloodborne pathogens such as HBV (2,3,7).
In nursing home A, the spring-loaded barrel of a fingerstick device
was used for multiple patients. Previous outbreaks have been linked
to such devices when the platform or barrel supporting the
disposable lancet was reused for multiple patients, when used
lancets were stored with unused lancets, or when lancet caps were
reused (2,3;
CDC, unpublished data, 1999). In assisted living center B, nursing
staff members routinely administered fingersticks without wearing
gloves or performing hand hygiene between patients, and
spring-loaded fingerstick devices were also occasionally shared.
In nursing home C, as with other recent outbreaks (8; CDC,
unpublished data, 2002), transmission of HBV among residents with
diabetes occurred despite use of single-use fingerstick devices or
insulin medication vials that were dedicated for individual patient
use. In these settings, glucose monitors, insulin vials, or other
surfaces contaminated with blood from an HBV-infected person might
have resulted in transfer of infectious virus to a health-care
worker's gloves and to the fingerstick wound or subcutaneous
injection site of a susceptible resident. Similar indirect
transmission of HBV in health-care settings through contaminated
environmental surfaces or inadequately disinfected equipment has
been reported with other health-care procedures, such as dialysis (6,9).
HBV is stable at ambient temperatures; infected patients, who often
lack clinical symptoms of hepatitis, can have high concentrations of
HBV in their blood or body fluids (6). To prevent
patient-to-patient transmission of infections through
cross-contamination, health-care providers should avoid carrying
supplies from resident to resident and avoid sharing devices,
including glucometers, among residents.
The risk for patient-to-patient transmission of HBV infection can
be reduced by implementing specific prevention measures (Boxes
1 and 2). LTC staff often
perform numerous percutaneous procedures; frequent blood glucose
monitoring increases opportunities for bloodborne pathogen
transmission. The outbreak investigations reported here identified
residents with diabetes who received fingersticks from nursing staff
members as often as four times per day, according to their
physician's routine orders, despite having consistently normal
glucose levels. Expert panels have concluded that approximately 8
years are needed before the benefits of glycemic control result in
reductions in microvascular complications (1,10). In LTC
settings, schedules for fingerstick blood sampling of individual
patients should be reviewed regularly to reduce the number of
percutaneous procedures to the minimum necessary for their
appropriate medical management. In each of the investigations
described in this report, implementation of infection-control
measures (Boxes 1 and 2) was
recommended, along with follow-up serologic testing for markers of
HBV.
An estimated 70,000--80,000 HBV infections occur each year in the
United States. Most of these infections occur among young adults
with behavioral risk factors (i.e., sexual contact and
injection-drug use); these adults should receive hepatitis B
vaccine. Preventing transmission of HBV among patients in
long-term--care settings requires adherence to recommended
infection-control practices and prompt response to identified
instances of transmission. Routine hepatitis B vaccination or
screening of LTC residents is not recommended. In the outbreaks
described in this report, initial cases were not identified or
investigated in a timely fashion, resulting in missed opportunities
to correct deficient practices and interrupt transmission. Evidence
of acute viral hepatitis in any LTC resident should prompt a
thorough investigation. For a case involving a resident with
diabetes, fingerstick blood sampling procedures and insulin
administration should receive particular scrutiny. Health
departments should encourage reporting of such cases and offer
assistance in identifying the source of infection. CDC continues to
support investigations in LTC and other health-care settings and is
working toward improved implementation of the infection-control
recommendations described in this report.
Acknowledgments
The findings in this report are based, in part, on data provided
by C Ranck, R Hotchkiss, B Amy, MD, Mississippi Dept of Health. J
Rosenberg, MD, Div of Communicable Disease Control, California Dept
of Health Svcs. P MacDonald, PhD, Dept of Epidemiology, Univ of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill; S Smith, P Poole, North Carolina Dept
of Health and Human Svcs. M Viray, Epidemiology Program Office, CDC.
References
- American Diabetes Association. Standards of medical care in
diabetes. Diabetes Care 2004;27:S15--35.
-
CDC. Nosocomial transmission of hepatitis B virus associated
with a spring-loaded fingerstick device---California. MMWR
1990;39:610--3.
-
CDC. Nosocomial hepatitis B virus infection associated with
reusable fingerstick blood sampling devices---Ohio and New York
City, 1996. MMWR 1997;46:217--21.
-
CDC. Update: universal precautions for prevention of
transmission of human immunodeficiency virus, hepatitis B virus,
and other bloodborne pathogens in health-care settings. MMWR
1988;37:377--88.
- American Association of Diabetes Educators. Educating
providers and persons with diabetes to prevent the transmission
of bloodborne infections and avoid injuries from sharps.
Chicago, IL: American Association of Diabetes Educators; 1997.
Available at
http://www.aadenet.org/PublicAffairs/PositionStatements/EducProvidersBloodborneInfetions.pdf.
- Williams IT, Perz JF, Bell BP. Viral hepatitis transmission
in ambulatory health care settings. Clin Infect Dis
2004;38:1592--8.
- Desenclos JC, Bourdiol-Razes M, Rolin B, et al. Hepatitis C
in a ward for cystic fibrosis and diabetic patients: possible
transmission by spring-loaded finger-stick devices for
self-monitoring of capillary blood glucose. Infect Control Hosp
Epidemiol 2001;22:701--7.
- Khan AJ, Cotter SM, Schulz B, et al. Nosocomial transmission
of hepatitis B virus infection among residents with diabetes in
a skilled nursing facility. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol
2002;23:313--8.
-
CDC. Recommendations for preventing transmission of infections
among chronic hemodialysis patients. MMWR 2001;50(No. RR-5).
- Brown AF, Mangione CM, Saliba D, Sarkisian CA; California
Healthcare Foundation/American Geriatrics Society Panel on
Improving Care for Elders with Diabetes. Guidelines for
improving the care of the older person with diabetes mellitus. J
Am Geriatr Soc 2003;51: S265--80.
Recommended practices for preventing patient-to-patient
transmission of hepatitis viruses.
<Gee> anyone remember how they did in back then, no gloves,
reused the lancet over and over again.
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Purdy, A., et al. 1997.
Nosocomial
hepatitis
B virus infection associated with reusable fingerstick blood sampling
devices - Ohio and New York,
1996. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 46:217-220.
- In 1996, outbreaks of hepatitis B virus (HBV)
infection occurred among patients with diabetes mellitus in a
nursing home in Ohio and hospital in New York City. Acute hepatitis
B was diagnosed in 4 residents of an Ohio nursing home. Eleven
residents were subsequently identified to be acutely or chronically
infected with HBV and all had diabetes mellitus. Among infected
individuals, the attack rate was 53% in those who underwent
fingerstick capillary testing and 0% among persons who did not
require finger sticks. When the first case was identified, the
facility routinely shared three fingerstick devices among patients.
Lancets were routinely changed but end caps were not. After
switching to individual fingerstick devices for each resident, no
new HBV infections were detected. Acute hepatitis B was also
diagnosed in 3 inpatients in a New York City hospital all of whom
had diabetes mellitus and were hospitalized during the same time
period. All 3 of these patients had fingerstick blood monitoring
compared to 20 susceptible patients hospitalized at the same time
who did not have fingersticks. Based on review of serological
records, 11 additional patients with possible nosocomially acquired
acute HBV infection were identified and 10 had received fingersticks
while hospitalized during the previous 6 months. After the hospital
switched from shared fingerstick devices to completely disposable,
nonreusable devices, no new cases of nosocomially acquired HBV
infections have been identified. Although similar outbreaks have
been reported previously, these investigations confirm that HBV can
be transmitted by fingerstick capillary-blood sampling devices.
These results emphasize the need to restrict such devices, even if
lancets are not reused, to individual patients.
http://cpmcnet.columbia.edu/dept/gi/mar97.html
A Decade of Needlestick
Prevention
A California Hospital's Experience
Lancet devices for glucose monitoring
Lancets for glucose monitoring
have refined safety features, including retractable lancets and penlets that
release the lancet without one needing to touch the lancet. Lancets are
considered a high-risk source of pathogen transmission due to the direct
contact with blood once the device is used. Lancets used for bedside glucose
monitoring should be single-patient use. If a spring-loaded fingerstick
device is used on more than one person, it should have a disposable finger
guard to prevent the risk of disease trans- mission, since spring-loaded
fingerstick devices have been implicated in the transmission of hepatitis B
virus among patients with diabetes mellitus.
http://www.infectioncontrolresource.org/IC_Issue3/InfectionControl.pdf.
Deja
vu: nosocomial hepatitis B virus transmission and finger stick monitoring.
Department of Veterans Affairs Medical
Center,Brooklyn, New York, USA. Am J Med 1998 Oct
105:4
296-301 Quale JM, Landman D, Wallace B, Atwood E, Ditore V, Fruchter
G
Abstract
PURPOSE: Three patients with acute hepatitis B virus infection were
identified who had been hospitalized on the same medical ward during a
19-day period several months earlier. An investigation was undertaken to
determine if nosocomial transmission had occurred. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A
cohort study of patients admitted to the medical ward during the 19-day
period in 1995 was conducted. In addition, we reviewed medical charts and
laboratory records of all patients with acute hepatitis B virus infection
who had been admitted to the hospital from 1992 through October 1996 to
identify other cases with possible nosocomial acquisition. RESULTS: The 3
patients who had developed acute hepatitis B infection 2 to 5 months after
hospitalization on the same medical ward had diabetes mellitus but no
identified risk factors for hepatitis B infection. A source patient with
diabetes mellitus and hepatitis B ''e'' antigenemia also was present on
the same medical ward at the same time; all 4 patients were infected with
the same viral subtype (adw2). Diabetes mellitus and fingerstick
monitoring were associated with illness (P <0.001). Through the review
of medical charts and laboratory records, 11 additional cases of suspected
nosocomial acquisition via fingersticks were identified in 1996, including
two clusters involving an unusual subtype of hepatitis B virus (adw4). The
fingerstick device employed had a reusable base onto which disposable
lancet caps were inserted. There was ample opportunity for
cross-contamination among patients because deficiencies in infection
control practices, particularly failure to change gloves between patients,
were reported by nurses and patients with diabetes mellitus. CONCLUSION:
Transmission during fingerstick procedures was the most likely cause of
these cases of nosocomial hepatitis B infection. Contamination probably
occurred when healthcare workers failed to change gloves between
patients undergoing fingerstick monitoring, although other means of contamination cannot be
ruled out.
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