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MUSC awarded funds to test
antimicrobial properties of copper metals
by
Maggie Diebolt
Public
Relations
Many are familiar with copper being used for electrical wiring, as
roofing material for houses, and to make pennies.
Now, MUSC researchers want to know if copper can be used to kill deadly
pathogens found in hospitals.
MUSC will participate in a study supported by congressionally
appropriated funds to determine the antimicrobial effectiveness of
copper, brass and bronze.
In one of two studies being performed in New York City and Charleston,
researchers at MUSC will focus on the ability of copper metals to kill
deadly pathogens on touch surfaces in hospital facilities. The other
study will focus on the effectiveness of copper components in heating,
ventilation and air-conditioning systems at Fort Jackson in Columbia;
Fort Gordon in Augusta, Ga.; and the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado
Springs, Colo.
The studies will be carried out for the U.S. Department of Defense
under the aegis of the Telemedicine and Advanced Technologies Research
Center (TATRC), a section of the Army Medical Research and Materiel
Command (USAMRMC), and implemented by Advanced Technology Institute
(ATI).
Michael G. Schmidt, Ph.D., professor and vice chairman of Microbiology
and Immunology, is lead investigator of the study being performed at
MUSC. “We are hoping that the results of this study will strongly
support that through the introduction of this inexpensive and passive
solution into the health care setting, the incidence of
hospital-acquired infections will decrease,” he said.
Recent peer-reviewed research conducted at the University of
Southampton in Great Britain proves copper, brass and bronze can
quickly and efficiently eradicate several different pathogens which are
the source of many hospital-acquired infections, including
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Escherichia coli
O157:H7. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
estimates that infections acquired in U.S. hospitals affect some 2
million individuals every year, resulting in nearly 100,000 deaths
annually and adding approximately $30 billion to our nationís
overall health care costs.
The touch surfaces study will employ a series of three clinical trials
to determine how well natural copper, brass and bronze surfaces
mitigate infectious microbes, decrease cross-contamination and
ultimately help reduce the incidence of hospital-acquired infections in
patients. Rates of infection will be measured using three indicator
organisms: MRSA, vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE) and
Acinetobacter baumannii, of particular concern since the beginning of
the Iraq War. The surfaces involved in the study are typically made of
stainless steel or plastic, which have little or no effect in
controlling pathogens.
Study centers include MUSC and the Ralph H. Johnson VA Medial Center,
both in Charleston, and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New
York City. Previous studies were conducted by ATS Labs in Eagan,
Minnesota, under test protocols established by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency. They show solid copper alloys are more than 99.9
percent effective on five pathogens commonly found in health care
facilities. The tests have been submitted to EPA as part of a
registration process to secure approval for making human health claims
for the copper metals.
A congressionally funded companion study will compare copper
air-conditioning system components, including cooling coils, heat
exchange fins and drip pans, with components made of aluminum as to
their ability to control the growth of harmful bacteria and fungi. The
trials are designed to demonstrate the effectiveness of copper surfaces
in reducing the colonization of HVAC systems by harmful microbes and
reducing exposure to these organisms throughout the buildings served by
the systems.
Friday, Aug. 10, 2007
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