To the Editor—More than 5 million endoscopies are performed annually in the United States, and ˜1 in 1.8 million procedures is associated with a healthcare-related infection. Reference Griffiths and Dwyer1–Reference Rutala and Weber3 However, the true rate of infection transmission during endoscopy is largely unrecognized because of the late onset of clinical symptoms after the procedure, underreporting, and other surveillance challenges. Reference Griffiths and Dwyer1–Reference Nelson and Muscarella4
Risk factors for gastrointestinal (GI) infections after endoscopy include bacterial biofilm formation, inadequate decontamination, immunocompromised patients, presence of infective foci in the operating field, and equipment malfunction. Procedural endoscopies, such as variceal ligation, are associated with significantly higher infection transmission than diagnostic GI procedures. Reference Cowen5–Reference Nelson8
The disinfection of endoscopes involves a complicated, multistep process, and any retained object in one of its narrow channels, such as a sheath, could increase the microbial burden and the chance of an endoscopy-related infection, as illustrated by the following example. Reference Griffiths and Dwyer1,Reference Alvarado and Reichelderfer9,Reference Beilenhoff, Neumann and Rey10 During a routine colonoscopy, the operator noticed resistance while advancing a vascular clipping wire through the channel. A sheath of a balloon-tipped catheter (M00558470 Boston Scientific CRE Wire-guided Esophageal/pyloric balloon dilation) was then extruded into the colonic lumen. The sheath and endoscope were withdrawn, and the procedure was completed with a different endoscope.
A standardized protocol for exposure investigation after a breach of disinfection procedure was followed. Reference Rutala and Weber3 The last time that type of balloon-tipped catheter was used occurred 20 days prior, resulting in 20 patients having potentially been exposed. However, a tracking system linking the serial number of any endoscope in the clinic to every patient it is/was used on had been implemented 1 year previously. This procedure revealed that the involved endoscope was used on only 2 subsequent patients. Review of patient records who had endoscopies in that 20-day period reconfirmed the number of patients potentially exposed (n = 2).
Interrogation of the endoscope with various inserts revealed that the presence of a retained sheath would allow passage of all types of guide wires, (snips, snares, etc), including the cleaning brush. The only device whose passage would have been prevented by a retained sheath was a vascular clipping device. Such clippings were performed as recently as 2 days prior to the incident, further confirming number of potentially exposed patients. Notably, this explained why the sheath had not been extruded by the cleaning brushes during the preparatory steps of reprocessing.
Exposed patients were notified and offered free testing for bloodborne and enteric pathogens. The county and state health departments were notified, and a MAUDE (Manufacturer and User Device Experience) report was filed with the US Food and Drug Administration. A search of the MAUDE database and PubMed revealed 2 similar incidents in the MAUDE database describing the failure of removal of the sheaths, which led to it being lodged in the endoscope compromising the disinfection process in one (June 14, 2019), and in the other, leading to detachment of the exit marker (February 18, 2017). No similar cases were found in PubMed.
The root cause analysis revealed that 4 factors contributed to this incident. First, the assisting technologist was newly trained and inexperienced. Second, the rapid turnover of patients, insufficient number of endoscopes, and different models of catheters stocked heightened risk of reprocessing breakdown. Third, there was no count and verification for the number of removable components (similar to an operating-room sponge count). Last, there were 2 important design flaws. The first flaw pertains to the sheath design, having a size that allows it to enter the channel. Additionally, this brand lacks a large warning flag that also precludes channel sheath entry (Fig. 1). The second flaw pertains to the cleaning brushes that are not large enough to extrude a lodged sheath because they pass through the lumen of the embedded sheath. This permits the sheath to remain, undetected, in the endoscope during the preparatory steps of reprocessing.
The Boston Scientific sheath covering the balloon is flared at each end. However, there is no tag on the sheath stating to remove it prior to use the balloon. In contrast, the sheath of the Cook Medical balloon has a tag indicating its removal prior to insertion of the balloon, and it is also large enough that the provider would not be able to advance the balloon unless the sheath were removed (Fig. 1). Additionally, because sheaths are not conventionally counted after the procedure, there is a risk of them being left unnoticed within the lumen of the endoscope channel.
The following measures would help prevent the recurrence of this process breakdown. First, manufacturers should consider modifying the design of balloon sheaths and cleaning brushes. Sheaths should not fit into the endoscope channel, either because of their size or the attachment of a nonremovable flag. Cleaning brushes should not pass through the lumen of an embedded sheath, thus leading operators to believe the channel is unaltered and that the endoscope has been properly and completely cleaned and disinfected. Next, a sheath count, verified by a second person or 2-stage discarding by the same person, should be implemented. This step would occur during and at the end of the procedure. During the procedure, whenever a device is unpackaged and disposable components are removed, instead of immediately throwing out the packaging and components (ie, sheaths), they should be retained and then recounted and recorded during room turnover. Meticulous endoscope tracking and cleaning logs should be kept. Finally, new technologists should be made aware of these risks during their orientation. Since implementing the sheath counts and education, no similar incidents have occurred at our facility.
Acknowledgments
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