4.5 Review

Disinfectant testing for veterinary and agricultural applications: A review

Journal

ZOONOSES AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 68, Issue 5, Pages 361-375

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/zph.12830

Keywords

bacterial pathogens; livestock; poultry; veterinary medicine; viral pathogens

Funding

  1. UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) [RDOM0406]

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Disinfectants for veterinary and livestock use, as well as skin antiseptics, are crucial for controlling infectious agents in managed animal species, impacting animal welfare, economic performance and human health. Testing of disinfectants is necessary for safety, efficacy and quality control, with various challenges related to biological targets, working concentrations, surface properties, contact times, and other factors. Despite efforts to develop standardized field tests for disinfectants, challenges such as cost, reproducibility and generalizability remain unresolved.
Disinfectants for veterinary and livestock use, plus skin antiseptics, are critical elements for the control of infectious agents, including zoonotic and antimicrobial-resistant micro-organisms, in managed animal species. Such agents impact animal welfare, economic performance and human health. Testing of disinfectants is needed for safety, efficacy and quality control. The present review examines the principal types of test (carrier, suspension, surface and field) that have been developed or attempted, plus the features inherent in the respective tests, particularly with respect to variability. Elements of testing that have to be controlled, or which can be manipulated, are discussed in the context of real-world scenarios and anticipated applications. Current national and international testing regimes are considered, with an emphasis on the UK, continental Europe and North America, and with further detail provided in the Supporting Information. Challenges to disinfectant efficacy include: the nature of the biological targets (bacteria, fungi, yeasts, spores, viruses and prions), the need for economical and safe working concentrations, the physical and chemical nature of contaminated surfaces, constraints on contact times and temperatures, the presence of organic soil and other barrier or neutralising substances (including biofilms), and thoroughness of pre- -cleaning and disinfectant application. The principal challenges with veterinary disinfectant testing are the control of test variability, and relating test results to likely performance in variable field conditions. Despite some ambitions to develop standardised field tests for disinfectants, aside from skin antiseptic trials the myriad problems such tests pose with respect to cost, reproducibility and generalisability remain intractable.

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