International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Nov 2023)

Moist heat as a promising method to decontaminate N95 masks: A large scale clinical study comparing four decontamination modalities—moist heat, steam, ultraviolet-C irradiation, and hydrogen peroxide plasma

  • Hei Man Wong,
  • Cheok Hong Mun,
  • Weng Keong Loke,
  • Wei Qi Lim,
  • Geraldine Wei Yen Chee,
  • Sook Lan Tan,
  • Jye Yng Teo,
  • Yi Yan Yang,
  • Hendrix Tanoto,
  • Xian Jun Loh,
  • Chen Ee Lee,
  • Chuanwen Tiang,
  • Wei Yee Wan,
  • Charlene Cheong,
  • Kue Bien How,
  • Moi Lin Ling,
  • Ban Hock Tan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 136
pp. 151 – 157

Abstract

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Background: Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a global shortage of masks. Although mask reprocessing was practiced, no clinical study has assessed systematically the impact of repeated cycles of wear and decontamination on the integrity of N95 filtering facepiece respirators (FFRs). Methods: We evaluated mask fit assessed by qualitative respirator fit test (QRFT) after each cycle of wear and decontamination, as well as four measures of mask integrity—bacterial filtration efficacy, particle filtration efficacy, differential pressure, and splash resistance through five cycles of wear and decontamination using one of the four modalities (moist heat, steam, ultraviolet-C irradiation, and hydrogen peroxide plasma). Results: A total of 60.6% (hydrogen peroxide plasma) to 77.5% (moist heat) of the FFRs passed five cycles of wear and decontamination, as assessed by the wearers passing QRFT all five times. Moist heat-decontaminated FFRs retained all technical measures of integrity through all five cycles. Conclusions: This is the first large-scale study to assess systematically the impact (clinically and quantitatively) on N95 FFR integrity of repeated cycles of wearing followed by decontamination.Our results suggest that moist heat is a promising method for decontaminating N95 FFRs. Performing QRFT after every cycle of wear and decontamination ensures wearer safety. Although there is currently no mask shortage, reprocessing may reduce medical waste and improve sustainability.

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