Prevention Strategies

Adding Cleaning Verification Tests to Your Reprocessing Regimen

If it looks dirty, it’s definitely dirty. If it looks clean, it might still be dirty.

Recent updates to the AANSI/AAMI reprocessing guidelines classify flexible endoscopes — including duodenoscopes, bronchoscopes, ureteroscopes, cystoscopes, and others — as "high-risk," which requires sterilization rather than high-level disinfection.

The update also states cleaning verification tests shall be performed on these endoscopes every time they are reprocessed.

“This means it’s no longer optional to do biological tests to make sure your scopes are clean,” Cori Ofstead, an epidemiologist and the president and CEO of Ofstead & Associates, said during a recent webinar.

The webinar, “Cleaning verification tests for flexible endoscopes,” examines the various types of cleaning verification tests, how they are conducted, and discusses how to interpret the results.

While guidelines say to do cleaning verification tests, they offer little instruction how, according to the presenters. These important logical questions remain:

  • Who performs the tests, trains techs, and reviews the results?
  • What tests and benchmarks should be used and what happens when residual soil is detected?
  • When is testing done and how frequently, especially for endoscopes that are not labeled high-risk?
  • Where will tests be performed and documented?

The presenters offer seven “critical insights,” including:

  • If it looks dirty, it’s definitely dirty. If it looks clean, it might still be dirty.
  • Strive to support a culture of discovery and wondering about root causes for residual soil rather than considering positive tests to be failures.

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