Assessing the Biosecurity Risk of Footwear as a Fomite for Transmission of Adventitious Infectious Agents to Mice. uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The soles of staff shoes accessing vivaria can become contaminated on urban streets, potentially serving as a source of fomite-mediated transmission of adventitious agents to laboratory rodents. While shoe covers may mitigate this risk, donning them can lead to hand contamination. Staff accessing our vivaria use motor-driven shoe cleaners hundreds of times daily to remove and collect particulates via a vacuum collection system from the top, sole, and sides of shoes instead of shoe covers. Shoe cleaner debris (SCD) and contact media (CM) exposed to SCD from shoe cleaners in 5 vivaria were assessed by PCR for 84 adventitious agents. SCD and CM samples tested positive for 33 and 37 agents, respectively, and a combined 39 agents total. To assess SCD infectivity, NSG and Swiss outbred mice were housed for 7 days in direct contact with SCD and oronasally inoculated with a suspension created from SCD collected from each of the 5 vivaria. Mice were tested by PCR and serology 3-, 7-, 14- and 63-days post-inoculation. All mice remained healthy until the study's end and tested negative for all agents found in SCD/CM except murine astrovirus 1, Staphyloccocus xylosus and Candidatus Savagella , agents known to be enzootic in the experimental mouse source colony. In a follow-up study, the soles of 27 staff street shoes were directly sampled using CM. Half of CM was used for PCR, while the other half was added as bedding material to a cage containing NSG and Swiss outbred mice. While CM tested positive for 11 agents, all mice were healthy 63 days post-exposure and again positive for only enzootic agents. These results suggest that shoe debris might not be a significant biosecurity risk to laboratory mice, questioning the need for shoe covers or cleaners when entering experimental barrier vivaria.

publication date

  • November 3, 2024

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC11566028

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1101/2024.11.03.621730

PubMed ID

  • 39554034