# A comparative assessment of contamination rates in gastrointestinal endoscope reprocessing: sterilization versus high‐level disinfection

**Authors:** Tanyaporn Chantarojanasiri, Rachanikorn Rungrueangmaitree, Siriporn Thongsri, Urasa Jampa‐ngern, Thawee Ratanachu‐Ek

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/deo2.70093 · DEN Open · 2025-03-09

## TL;DR

This study compared sterilization and high-level disinfection for cleaning endoscopes and found no significant difference in contamination rates.

## Contribution

The study provides new evidence on the effectiveness of sterilization versus high-level disinfection for gastrointestinal endoscope reprocessing.

## Key findings

- Sterilization and high-level disinfection had similar contamination rates (5.9% vs. 7.2%).
- Swabbing detected significantly more bacteria than liquid samples (6.0% vs. 0.5%).
- Endoscope type and biliary stones did not affect contamination rates.

## Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the disparity in culture results between sterilization and high‐level disinfection (HLD) for duodenoscopes and linear endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), and to assess the effectiveness of different bacterial contamination detection methods.

This is a prospective randomized study, including duodenoscopes and linear EUS with adenosine triphosphate bioluminescence assay values below 200 relative light units after manual cleaning which were randomly assigned to undergo either sterilization or HLD in a 1:1 ratio. Following disinfection, all endoscopes were subjected to adenosine triphosphate bioluminescence assay testing and cultures using both swab and liquid samples from endoscope channels.

Totally 752 endoscopes (444 duodenoscopes and 308 linear EUS) were studied. After disinfection, the positive culture rates for the sterilization and HLD groups were 5.9% and 7.2%, respectively (p = 0.460). No significant difference in contamination rates was observed between duodenoscopes and linear EUS (5.9% and 7.5%, respectively; p = 0.379), and no significant association between contamination rates and the presence of biliary stones was seen (7.3% vs. 6.9%; p = 0.613). The detection rate of bacteria from liquid samples taken from endoscope channels was 0.5%, which was significantly lower than the swabbing method (6.0%, p < 0.001).

This study found no statistically significant difference in contamination rates between sterilization and HLD methods for gastrointestinal endoscope reprocessing. The type of endoscope and the presence of biliary stones did not influence the positive culture rate. The swabbing method showed significantly higher bacterial detection when compared with liquid samples.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** biliary stones (MESH:D002137)
- **Chemicals:** adenosine triphosphate (MESH:D000255)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11891260/full.md

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11891260/full.md

## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11891260/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11891260