Needle-stick injuries Flashcards

1
Q

how do you evaluate risk of transmission of any infection from a contaminated source

A

evaluate risk of infection in the source patient by history and serologic testing

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2
Q

what is the risk of infection of the below via percutaneous injury (needle stick):
HBV

A

6-30%

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3
Q

what is the risk of infection of the below via percutaneous injury (needle stick):
HCV

A

1.8%

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4
Q

what is the risk of infection of the below via percutaneous injury (needle stick):
HIV

A
  1. 3%

* risk from mucous membrane contact is 0.09%

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5
Q

risk factors for HBV transmission

A

non immune

source patient is HBeAG positive

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6
Q

what body fluids are documented to transmit HBV

A

blood and blood products

semen, vaginal secretions and saliva can potentially transmit the virus

non bloody urine and feces are unlikely to transmit

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7
Q

what type of post exposure prophylaxis is offered in the case of possible HBV transmission/needle stick

A

if affected person is unvaccinated: 1x HBIG within 24 hours and primary vaccination within 7 days

if vaccinated and anti-HbsAG titer above 10mIU/mL–no treatment

if vaccinated and anti-HbsAg titer less than 10 then treat as if unvaccinated

if vaccinated, titer is unknown but known response to previous vaccine, then give 1 booster dose of vaccine

if vaccinated but no response to previous vaccine, give 2 doses of HBIG one month apart or initiate revaccination and 1 dose of HBIG

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8
Q

what is the efficacy of prophylaxis for HBV

A

HBIG + vaccine–85-95%
vaccine alone–70-95%
multiple doses of HBIG–70-75%

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9
Q

what follow up should be offered in the case of exposure to HBV/needle stick

A

minimal risk of transmission to patients, household contacts and sexual partners for those that receive prophylaxis

test for anti-HbsAg 1-6 months post vaccination

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10
Q

is there any proven post exposure prophylaxis for HCV blood or contaminated body fluids

A

no

immunoglobin and antiviral agents are NOT recommended in post exposure prophylaxis of HCV

the post exposure use of interferon (1-3 days of therapy initiated 1-12 days after exposure) has not been documented to reduce the rate of infection

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11
Q

what is the recommended follow up for HCV exposure/needle stick

A

baseline testing for anti-HCV, HCV RNA and ALT

follow up testing for HCV RNC between 4-5 weeks after exposure

follow up testing for anti-HCV, HCV RNA and ALT 4-6 months after exposure

  • if anti-HCV titers are negative, there exists only a 10% chance of infection
  • if anti-HCV titers are positive, 50% can go on to develop chronic hepatitis so may benefit from treatment with interferon alpha
  • should avoid unprotected sex until follow up testing is complete however little evidence to suggest that sexual transmission of HCV is problematic
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12
Q

risk factors for transmission of HIV

A

large volume of inoculate

increased titer of HIV (early and late disease)

deep injury

a device visibly contaminated with the patients blood

needle placement in a vein or artery

termina illness in the source patient

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13
Q

initial actions to take following exposure/needle stick in case of HIV risk

A

skin–> immediate cleansing with soap, water, antiseptics like alcohol or chlorhexidine

mucosal membrane–> copious amounts of water

eyes–> saline or water

post exposure prophylaxis depending on type of exposure

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14
Q

how do you decide whether to do PEP

A

must weigh risk of infection with HIV against toxicity and inconvenience of PEP

individual preferences of the exposed HCW will generally determine the decision

  • all known seroconversions have occurred with exposure to blood, bodily fluids, or viral culture –> contamination of intact skin with body fluids is not considered an exposure and PEP is not required
  • CDC recommends that PEP should be based on whether the exposure is percutaneous or to mucous membranes or non intake skin, and take into account the likelihood the source is HIV infected and the stage of HIV infection
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15
Q

what is PEP for HIV

A

2 NRTIs for lower risk exposure and the addition of a boosted protease inhibitor for higher risk exposures–> take them for 4 weeks

  • initiation should not be delayed for pending determination of source status
  • offer PEP up to 24-36 hours after exposure; start PEP 1-2 hours or earlier post exposure
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16
Q

exposures to what kind of HIV source would warrant the expanded 3 drug PEP in a percutaneous injury/needle stick

A

symptomatic HIV infection, AIDS, acute seroconversion patients or known high viral load

17
Q

how do you follow up a possible HIV exposure/needle stick

A

monitor for drug toxicity from PEP with CBC biweekly, renal and LFTS biweekly and if you are on the expanded 3 drug regimen, monitor hyperglycemia

monitor for anti-HIV at baseline, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months post exposure
–> negative result at 6 months implies lack of transmission

18
Q

how do you counsel people exposure to HIV about sex

A

protected sex until 6 month testing is complete

19
Q

what do you have to remember when counselling after a possible HIV exposure/needle stick

A

mental health issues