Author: Sheikh, S.; Hamilton, F. W.; Nava, G.; Gregson, F.; Arnold, D. T.; Riley, C.; Brown, J.; AERATOR Group,; Bzdek, B.; Reid, J.; Maskell, N.; Dodd, J. W.
Title: Risk and mitigation of aerosolisation from lung function testing: results from the AERATOR study. Cord-id: slvg83d9 Document date: 2021_3_8
ID: slvg83d9
Snippet: Introduction Lung function tests are fundamental diagnostic and monitoring tools for patients with respiratory symptoms. There is significant uncertainty around whether potentially infectious aerosol is produced during different lung function testing modalities; and limited data on possible mitigation strategies to reduce risk to staff and limit fallow time. Methods Healthy volunteers were recruited in an ultraclean, laminar flow theatre and had standardised spirometry as per ERS/ATS guidance, a
Document: Introduction Lung function tests are fundamental diagnostic and monitoring tools for patients with respiratory symptoms. There is significant uncertainty around whether potentially infectious aerosol is produced during different lung function testing modalities; and limited data on possible mitigation strategies to reduce risk to staff and limit fallow time. Methods Healthy volunteers were recruited in an ultraclean, laminar flow theatre and had standardised spirometry as per ERS/ATS guidance, as well as peak flow measurement and FENO assessment of airway inflammation. Aerosol emission was sampled once each second using both Aerodynamic Particle Sizer (APS) and Optical Particle Sizer (OPS), and compared to breathing, speaking and coughing. Mitigation strategies such as a peak flow viral filter and a CPET facemask (to mitigate induced coughing) were tested. Results 33 healthy volunteers were recruited. Aerosol emission was highest in cough (1.61 particles/cm3/sample), followed by unfiltered peak flow (0.76 particles/cm3/sample). Filtered spirometry produced similar peak aerosol emission as talking, and addition of a viral filter to the mouthpiece reduced peak flow aerosol emission to similar levels. The filter made little difference to recorded peak flow values. FENO measurement produced negligible aerosol. Re usable CPET masks with filter reduced aerosol emission when breathing, speaking, and coughing significantly. Conclusions Compared to voluntary coughing, all lung function testing produced less aerosol. Filtered spirometry produces similar peak aerosol emission to speaking, and should not be deemed an aerosol generating procedure. The use of viral filters reduces aerosol emission in peak flow by > 10 times, and has little impact on recorded peak flow values. CPET masks are a useful option to reduce aerosol emission from induced coughing while performing spirometry.
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