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A Response to the Validity of an Article Reporting Contrary Cleaning Efficacy Results for Robotic Surgical Instruments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2017

Brian H. Wallace*
Affiliation:
Intuitive Surgical, Sunnyvale, California.
*
Address correspondence to Brian H. Wallace, PhD, Managing Principal, Applied Science and Biological Safety, Intuitive Surgical, 1266 Kifer Rd, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 ([email protected])
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Abstract

Type
Letters to the Editor
Copyright
© 2017 by The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America. All rights reserved 

To the Editor—The article by Saito et alReference Saito, Yasuhara, Murakoshi, Komatsu, Fukatsu and Uetera 1 makes unsupported assertions and reports cleaning efficacy results of robotic surgical instruments that are contrary to published data using validated methods.

REVIEW OF EXPERIMENTAL INCONSISTENCIES

The results of this study are unreliable due to several inconsistencies in the application of scientific best practices, including different treatments of the reference and test groups of instruments, the absence of experimental controls, and the use of an unvalidated residual protein extraction method.

In this study, reference instruments (ie, common handheld surgical instruments) were reprocessed in an automated washer disinfector using an alkaline detergent, whereas the test instruments (ie, robotic surgical instruments) were reprocessed manually using a pH-neutral detergent. Correspondingly, thermal disinfection was performed on the reference instruments at 93°C for 10 minutes. Protein is denatured and becomes fixed (covalently bound) to surfaces at temperatures >55°C,Reference Michels and Pieper 2 making them unavailable to extraction using standardized methods. For this reason, thermal disinfection is not allowed during a test of cleaning efficacy according to the International Standards Organization specifications for washer-disinfectors (ISO 15883–1). 3 Unless the extraction method using water and ultrasonic energy has been validated to solubilize protein fixed at high temperatures, it can be assumed that residual protein on the reference devices is not extracted.

A negative control was not employed in this study, but a negative control is required to quantify potential interfering effects to the testing methodology.Reference Lipsitch, Tchetgen and Cohen 4 It is important to clarify that the bicinchoninic acid (BCA) test does not measure protein directly but measures the ability of certain amino acids and the peptide bond (at elevated temperature) to reduce copper in the reagent from Cu(II) to Cu(I). Reduced copper is then chelated by 2 BCA molecules, resulting in a shift in absorbance at 562 nm proportional to the amount of protein in the sample.Reference Smith, Krohn and Hermanson 5 Consequently, any compound that can reduce Cu(II) under the conditions of the assay will also generate a proportional signal. Due to the harsh nature of the ultrasound extraction process used for the robotic instruments, the possibility of releasing interfering substances cannot be ruled out without the use of negative controls (ie, devices that are reprocessed and extracted but not soiled). The authors neither cited nor provided evidence for the validation of their ultrasonic protein extraction method, even though validated methods have been published.Reference Wehrl and Michels 6 , Reference Wehrl, Albers and Buhler 7 The publications of the AG da Vinci Working Group provide methods for the destructive and nondestructive evaluation of robotic instruments that have been validated by controlled experimentation including recovery efficacy and blind testing at certified laboratories.

Extraction in an ultrasonic bath for 30 minutes is harsh and can result in instrument damage and the release of iron and tungsten particles that interfere with the BCA protein test by reducing Cu(II) according to their relative positions in the electrochemical series. If surgical soil were present on the devices, ultrasonic energy would typically liberate the soil in particles (rather than solubilizing), which would lead to turbidity in the extract and to false-positive results in the spectrophotometric measurement. Entire robotic instruments were extracted in a large volume of water (200 mL) rather than only extracting the patient contact portions of the devices. This creates an analytical issue because the BCA test gives results in µg/mL, which are then multiplied by the extract volume to give total protein in micrograms. Multiplying the result by a large number leads to an amplification of both the signal from the protein and the signal from interfering substances (and turbidity) and increases the limit of detection for the method by the same factor.

STUDY RESULTS COMPARED TO PUBLISHED EVIDENCE OF CLEANING EFFICACY

The results reported by Saito et al show a ~2-log reduction in surgical soil after cleaning both the reference and robotic instruments. After serial extractions of the cleaned robotic instruments, however, an expected log reduction in residual protein in robotic instruments is not seen, as is claimed by the authors. Figure 1 shows the results with actual lines in place of trend lines. The elevated flat response after the serial extractions of cleaned robotic instruments can be indicative of a high interference signal in the BCA results.

FIGURE 1 Results of Saito et alReference Saito, Yasuhara, Murakoshi, Komatsu, Fukatsu and Uetera 1 redrawn with connecting lines. Measurement 1 represents residual protein on a set of instruments prior to cleaning. Measurements 2–4 represent residual protein from serial extractions on a different set of cleaned instruments. The results for robotic instruments indicate a possible high-level background signal.

In contrast, 223 clinically used robotic instruments were tested using the validated method of the Working Group by certified laboratories as part of ISO 15883–13 cleaning process qualifications at 28 hospitals in Germany.Reference Wallace, Wille, Roth and Hubert 8 Hospital staff were trained and monitored to follow the manufacturer’s instructions during the first year of the study; in the subsequent 2 years, the average total residual protein results for robotic instruments were 72.7 µg (n=89) in 2013 and 35.1 µg (n=73) in 2014. Over these 2 years, only 4 values were reported to be >200 µg. The high residual protein results for robotic instruments reported by Saito et al do not match the cleaning performance established in the German study in which hospitals were compliant with the reprocessing instructions and validated testing methods were used.

DISCUSSION

Scientific best practices and controlled experimentation are not evident in the execution of the Saito et al study and published cleaning efficacy data refute the results. Additionally, the safety of robotic-assisted surgery has been extensively reported in the clinical literature; numerous multisite studies have reported statistically significant lower infection rates for robotic-assisted surgery compared to other surgical methods.Reference Luciano, Luciano, Gabbert and Seshadri-Kreaden 9 , Reference Tewari, Sooriakumaran, Bloch, Seshadri-Kreaden, Hebert and Wiklund 10 Thus, the assertions and assumptions of the article are without merit.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Potential conflict of interest: The author is a Principal Scientist at Intuitive Surgical.

Financial support: No financial support from an outside organization pertaining to this article has been received.

References

REFERENCES

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Figure 0

FIGURE 1 Results of Saito et al1 redrawn with connecting lines. Measurement 1 represents residual protein on a set of instruments prior to cleaning. Measurements 2–4 represent residual protein from serial extractions on a different set of cleaned instruments. The results for robotic instruments indicate a possible high-level background signal.