Baltimore Sun Sunday

Officials warn of surgical tool shortage amid sterilizat­ion plant shutter

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — Hospitals could soon face shortages of critical surgical tools because several plants that sterilize the equipment have been shut down, government health officials said.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion flagged the issue in an online statement to medical profession­als, saying the result could be years of shortages of supplies used in heart surgery, knee replacemen­ts, Csections and many other procedures.

The warning Friday follows the recent closure of several sterilizat­ion facilities that use ethylene oxide. The gas is critical for cleaning medical equipment, but it can be hazardous at elevated levels and is increasing­ly being scrutinize­d by state health and environmen­tal officials.

“The impact resulting from closure of these and perhaps more facilities will be difficult to reverse,” said FDA acting commission­er Ned Sharpless, in a statement, adding that the shortages “could compromise patient care.”

The FDA urged hospitals to inventory their supplies and alert government officials if they face major shortages. The agency said regulators could help identify alternativ­e devices for those impacted by the issue.

Sterilizat­ion is a daily process at hospitals and many other health care facilities, used to remove bacteria from medical scopes, catheters, surgical kits and other reusable instrument­s. Hospitals use various cleaning methods, including heat, steam and radiation. But the oxide gas is the only method for cleaning many devices made from plastic, metal or glass, according to the FDA. About half of all sterilized medical devices in the country are cleaned with the gas, according to studies cited by the agency.

Exposure to dangerous levels of ethylene oxide can cause cancer, including leukemia and lymphoma, according to the National Institutes of Health. Factories that emit the gas are subject to safety standards by both state and federal environmen­tal laws.

Earlier this year, Illinois authoritie­s closed a large plant owned by sterilizat­ion company Sterigenic­s after detecting high outdoor levels of the gas. This month, the company announced the plant would not reopen.

Another Sterigenic­s plant in Georgia has been closed for maintenanc­e since August after state officials detected potentiall­y dangerous emissions at the Atlanta facility.

 ?? GETTY ?? The gas used to clean medical tools may cause cancer at high exposures.
GETTY The gas used to clean medical tools may cause cancer at high exposures.

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