Department of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
J Clin Neurosci. 2013 Sep;20(9):1207-12. doi: 10.1016/j.jocn.2013.01.007. Epub 2013 Jul 27.
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a neurodegenerative prion disease that can spread via contaminated neurosurgical instruments previously used on an infected patient. We examine current guidelines on how to recognize, handle, and prevent instrument-related iatrogenic CJD. Despite only four reported patients worldwide implicating contaminated neurosurgical instruments, and none in the past 30 years, the public health consequences of potential instrument-related iatrogenic CJD can be far-reaching. Conventional sterilization and disinfection methods are inadequate in reducing prion infectivity of contaminated instruments, and World Health Organization recommendations for disinfection using bleach or sodium hydroxide are often impractical for routine decontamination. Recently, possible CJD exposure via infected surgical instruments was suspected at a large teaching hospital. Although CJD was later disproven, the intervening investigation exposed the difficulty in tracking infected surgical instruments and in protecting subsequent surgical patients from prion infection. To identify patients at risk for iatrogenic CJD, infectivity of instruments after this index patient is estimated using simple scenario modeling, assuming a certain log reduction of infectivity for each cleansing cycle. Scenario modeling predicts that after six cycles of instrument use with conventional cleansing following an index patient, other patients are highly unlikely to be at risk for iatrogenic CJD. Despite its rarity, the threat of iatrogenic CJD transmission via contaminated instruments poses tremendous challenges to neurosurgeons. Basic prevention strategies should be employed for patients with suspected CJD, including use of disposable instruments where possible and quarantining non-disposable instruments until the diagnosis is ascertained, or using special instrument reprocessing methods if CJD is suspected.
克雅氏病(CJD)是一种神经退行性朊病毒病,可以通过之前用于感染患者的受污染神经外科器械传播。我们研究了如何识别、处理和预防与器械相关的医源性克雅氏病的现行指南。尽管全世界仅报告了四起涉及受污染神经外科器械的患者病例,且过去 30 年中无一例,但与器械相关的医源性克雅氏病的潜在公共卫生后果可能是深远的。常规的消毒和灭菌方法不足以降低受污染器械中的朊病毒感染力,世界卫生组织推荐使用漂白剂或氢氧化钠进行消毒的方法在常规去污方面往往不切实际。最近,一家大型教学医院怀疑通过受感染的手术器械发生了可能的 CJD 暴露。尽管后来证明 CJD 并未发生,但在此期间的调查暴露了追踪受感染手术器械以及保护后续手术患者免受朊病毒感染的困难。为了确定医源性克雅氏病的风险患者,我们使用简单的情景模型来估计该患者后的器械感染性,假设每个清洁周期的感染性降低一定的对数。情景模型预测,在索引患者后,器械经过六次常规清洁使用周期后,其他患者不太可能有医源性 CJD 的风险。尽管其发病率较低,但通过受污染器械传播医源性 CJD 的威胁给神经外科医生带来了巨大挑战。对于疑似 CJD 的患者,应采用基本的预防策略,包括在可能的情况下使用一次性器械,并在确诊前隔离非一次性器械,或者在怀疑 CJD 时使用特殊的器械再处理方法。