Abstract

IntroductionSafe disposal of TB culture material in which the infectious burden of clinical samples has been greatly amplified is an important challenge in resource-limited settings. The bactericidal capacity of solar cookers has been demonstrated previously for conventional bacteria and contaminated clinical waste. We investigated the use of a simple solar cooker for the sterilization of mycobacterial broth cultures from the microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay (MODS).MethodsSimulated TB culture materials were prepared by inoculating 24-well MODS plates with 500 µL of a known concentration of Mycobacterium bovis BCG. In a series of experiments, samples were simultaneously placed inside a box-type solar cooker and control box and removed at timepoints between 15 minutes and 6 hours. Quantitative cultures were performed using retrieved samples to determine sterilization effect.ResultsAll cultures from the control box were positive at or within 1–4 logs of inoculation concentration. Simulated culture plates at concentrations from 103colony-forming-units (CFU)/ml to 107 CFU/ml were completely sterilized after only one hour of cooker exposure, at temperatures between 50–102°C. At 109 CFU/ml (far in excess of diagnostic cultures), it was only possible to recover mycobacterial growth in plates removed after 15 minutes. By 30 minutes all plates were effectively sterilized.DiscussionSolar disinfection provides a very effective, safe and low-cost alternative to conventional equipment used for disposal of mycobacterial culture material. Effect of climatic conditions and optimal operating procedure remain to be defined.

Highlights

  • Safe disposal of TB culture material in which the infectious burden of clinical samples has been greatly amplified is an important challenge in resource-limited settings

  • We investigated whether disinfection using a solar, cooker, could potentially provide a low-cost yet effective alternative for safe decontamination of diagnostic Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) cultures generated by microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay (MODS)

  • In all experiments the pooled cultures recovered from plates placed in the control box yielded positive cultures at or within 1–2 logs of inoculation concentration at concentrations from 103 concentrations from 103colony-forming-units (CFU)/ml to CFU/ml and within 2–4 logs of inoculation concentration at concentrations from CFU/ml to 109 CFU/

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Summary

Introduction

Safe disposal of TB culture material in which the infectious burden of clinical samples has been greatly amplified is an important challenge in resource-limited settings. We investigated the use of a simple solar cooker for the sterilization of mycobacterial broth cultures from the microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay (MODS). Solar disinfection provides a very effective, safe and low-cost alternative to conventional equipment used for disposal of mycobacterial culture material. Evaluation to date has focused on the performance of MODS in improving diagnosis but an important issue for every TB laboratory is safe disposal of the amplified mycobacterial load generated by liquid cultures. This aspect of MODS implementation has not been previously investigated, though it is clearly of fundamental importance in the field

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