Document details

Exposure assessment in one central hospital: a multi-approach protocol to achieve an accurate risk characterization

Author(s): Viegas, Carla ; Almeida, Beatriz ; Monteiro, Ana ; Paciência, Inês ; Rufo, João ; Aguiar, Lívia ; Lage, Bruna ; Diogo Gonçalves, Lídia Maria ; Aranha Caetano, Liliana ; Carolino, Elisabete ; Gomes, Anita Quintal ; Twarużek, Magdalena ; Kosicki, Robert ; Grajewski, Jan ; Teixeira, João Paulo ; Viegas, Susana ; Pereira, Cristiana

Date: 2020

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.21/10717

Origin: Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa

Subject(s): Occupational health; Occupational exposure; Active and passive sampling methods; Bioburden; Azole resistance; Endotoxins; Cytotoxicity assessment; Hospital; Portugal; Project nº 23222 (02/SAICT/2016); Project EXPOsE


Description

The bioburden in a Hospital building originates not only from patients, visitors and staff, but is also disseminated by several indoor hospital characteristics and outdoor environmental sources. This study intends to assess the exposure to bioburden in one central hospital with a multi-approach protocol using active and passive sampling methods. The microbial contamination was also characterized through molecular tools for toxigenic species, antifungal resistance and mycotoxins, and endotoxins profile. Two cytotoxicity assays (MTT and resazurin) were conducted with two cell lines (Calu-3 and THP-1), and in vitro pro-inflammatory potential was assessed in the THP-1 cell line. Out of the 15 sampling locations, 33.3% did not comply with Portuguese legislation regarding bacterial contamination, whereas concerning fungal contamination 60% presented I/O > 1. Toxigenic fungal species were observed in 27% of the sampled rooms (4 out of 15) and qPCR analysis successfully amplified DNA from the Aspergillus sections Flavi and Fumigati, although mycotoxins were not detected. Growth of distinct fungal species was observed on Sabouraud dextrose agar with triazole drugs, such as Aspergillus section Versicolores on 1 mg/L VORI. The highest concentrations of endotoxins were found in settled dust samples and ranged from 5.72 to 23.0 EU.mg−1. While a considerable cytotoxic effect (cell viability < 30%) was observed in one HVAC filter sample with the Calu-3 cell line, it was not observed with the THP-1 cell line. In air samples, a medium cytotoxic effect (61–68% cell viability) was observed in 3 out of 15 samples. The cytokine responses produced a more potent average cell response (46.8 ± 12.3 ρg/mL IL-1β; 90.8 ± 58.5 ρg/mL TNF-α) on passive samples than air samples (25.5 ± 5.2 ρg/mL IL-1β and of 19.4 ± 5.2 ρg/mL TNF-α). A multi-approach regarding parameters to assess, sampling, and analysis methods should be followed to characterize the bioburden in the hospital indoor environment. This study supports the importance of considering exposure to complex mixtures in indoor environments.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) RCIPL
CC Licence
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Related documents

No related documents