Evaluation of a microbiological screening and acceptance procedure for cryopreserved skin allografts based on 14 day cultures

Jean Paul Pirnay, Gunther Verween, Bruno Pascual, Gilbert Verbeken, Peter De Corte, Thomas Rose, Serge Jennes, Alain Vanderkelen, Miriam Marichal, Walter Heuninckx, Daniel De Vos

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Viable donor skin is still considered the gold standard for the temporary covering of burns. Since 1985, the Brussels military skin bank supplies cryopreserved viable cadaveric skin for therapeutic use. Unfortunately, viable skin can not be sterilised, which increases the risk of disease transmission. On the other hand, every effort should be made to ensure that the largest possible part of the donated skin is processed into high-performance grafts. Cryopreserved skin allografts that fail bacterial or fungal screening are reworked into 'sterile' non-viable glycerolised skin allografts. The transposition of the European Human Cell and Tissue Directives into Belgian Law has prompted us to install apragmatic microbiological screening and acceptance procedure, which is based on 14 day enrichment broth cultures of finished product samples and treats the complex issues of 'acceptable bioburden' and 'absence of objectionable organisms'. In this paper we evaluate this procedure applied on 148 skin donations. An incubation time of 14 days allowed for the detection of an additional 16.9% (25/148) of contaminated skin compared to our classic 3 day incubation protocol and consequently increased the share of non-viable glycerolized skin with 8.4%. Importantly, 24% of these slow-growing microorganisms were considered to be potentially pathogenic. In addition, we raise the issue of 'representative sampling' of heterogeneously contaminated skin. In summary, we feel that our present microbiological testing and acceptance procedure assures adequate patient safety and skin availability. The question remains, however, whether the supposed increased safety of our skin grafts outweighs the reduced overall clinical performance and the increase in work load and costs.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)287-295
    Number of pages9
    JournalCell and Tissue Banking
    Volume13
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jun 2012

    Keywords

    • Allograft donor skin
    • Bacteriological and fungal contamination
    • Cell and tissue banking
    • Cryopreservation
    • Screening

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