Evaluation of the permeation of antineoplastic agents through medical gloves of varying materials and thickness and with varying surface treatments

Medical gloves are an important piece of personal protective equipment that prevents exposure to antineoplastic agents. The permeability of medical gloves to antineoplastic agents is a crucial factor in the appropriate selection of gloves. However, the relationship between glove permeability and material type, thickness, and surface treatment is poorly understood. A continuous flow in-line cell device was used for the evaluation of the permeation of five antineoplastic agents (etoposide, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin hydrochloride, paclitaxel, and fluorouracil) through medical gloves. Medical gloves made of three types of materials (chlorinated latex, non-chlorinated latex, and nitrile) were subjected to a permeability test. The antineoplastic agents in test solutions were tested at the highest concentrations employed in general clinical practice. Then, the relationship between glove thickness and permeability was assessed using chlorinated latex gloves with thicknesses of 0.1, 0.15, 0.2, and 0.1 mm × 2 (to represent the practice of “double gloving”). Only cyclophosphamide and fluorouracil showed detectable permeation through the tested latex gloves. The permeability of chlorinated latex was lower than that of non-chlorinated latex. Nitrile gloves showed no detectable permeability to any of the five antineoplastic agents tested. The permeability of chlorinated latex gloves depended on the thickness of the gloves; 0.1 mm × 2 (double gloving) exhibited the highest resistance to permeation by antineoplastic agents. The permeability of medical gloves was dependent on the type of material and the surface treatment and decreased as the thickness of the glove increased. The double glove was shown to prevent antineoplastic agent permeation more efficiently than did a single glove of the same total thickness. These results provided important information that will guide the appropriate selection of medical gloves.


Background
It is well known that antineoplastic agents are potentially cytotoxic, mutagenic, teratogenic, and carcinogenic [1,2]. Hence, healthcare professionals must take care to avoid unintended exposure during the handling process of these agents. The correct use of safety cabinets, closed-system transfer devices, and personal protective equipment (PPE), such as gloves, masks, and gowns, is essential to protect healthcare professionals from exposure to antineoplastic agents used in the clinical setting. However, several reports have indicated that healthcare professionals are exposed to antineoplastic agents despite the use of preventive devices and equipment, and may therefore have an increased risk of carcinogenesis [3][4][5][6]. To counter this situation, guidelines have recently been formulated to standardize the relevant procedures for clinical settings [7][8][9], which provide recommendations for the optimal workplace requirements, handling procedures to minimize the exposure to antineoplastic agents, and instructions for the proper use of PPEs.
Among the various items of PPE, medical gloves encounter the highest risk of exposure to antineoplastic agents during the handling process; thus, a selection of medical gloves with low permeability to antineoplastic agents are required to prevent healthcare professionals from unintended exposure. Owing to the importance of this requirement, the permeability of gloves to antineoplastic agents has been extensively investigated and some antineoplastic agents, such as cyclophosphamide (CPA) and carmustine, have been reported to penetrate through standard medical gloves [10] . Several studies have investigated the relationship between the type of materials, thickness of medical gloves, and permeability to antineoplastic agents. These studies showed that the permeability was dependent on the type of materials and thickness; however it was also shown that gloves made of the same material and thickness showed varying permeability depending on the brand [11], which suggested that manufacturing processes may alter the permeability of the gloves. Furthermore, gloves may receive surface treatment with chlorine or other chemicals to improve their fitting; the effects of such treatments on permeability have not been elucidated. Therefore, we chose to study the permeability of gloves that are made on the same manufacturing line, in addition to the possible effects of surface treatment.
In this study, we conducted the permeability tests using medical gloves made of latex (with and without surface treatment by chlorine) and nitrile to assess the effect of the types of materials and the thickness of gloves on the permeation of antineoplastic agents. Furthermore, we evaluated whether "double gloving" (i.e., wearing two sets of gloves), which is recommended in the guidelines for handling antineoplastic agents [8,9,12], had a preventive effect on permeation.
The compounds of ETP, CPA, and 5FU were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA), and DXR hydrochloride and PTX were purchased from Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Ltd (Osaka, Japan). Gemcitabine hydrochloride was purchased from Toronto Research Chemicals Inc. (Toronto, Canada) and served as the internal standard for the 5FU assay. All other chemicals and organic solvents used in this study were of reagent or analytical grade.

Medical gloves
Three types of gloves were used in this study: latex rubber with a non-chlorinated surface (latex A), latex rubber with a chlorinated surface (latex B), and nitrile rubber (nitrile). The glove thickness was approximately 0.1 mm for all materials.
The relationship between permeability and glove thickness was investigated using gloves made of latex B with different thicknesses (0.1, 0.15, and 0.2 mm). In addition, to evaluate the permeability of antineoplastic agents through double gloves, latex B gloves with a thickness of 0.1 mm were placed on top of each other (0.1 mm × 2) and subjected to the permeability test described below. All gloves used in this study were supplied by Okamoto Industries, Inc. (Tokyo, Japan) after inspection of thickness. The allowance range of thickness was set at ±0.03 mm from specified values.

Permeability test
The permeability tests were performed according to methods described in the ASTM protocols D6978-05 and F739-07 [17,18] (Fig. 1). In brief, medical gloves (contact area: 1 cm 2 ) were placed in an ILC14 continuous flow in-line cell (PermeGear Inc., Hellertown, PA, USA), and the receptor solution (purified water) was pumped through the receptor chamber at a flow rate of 1 mL/h. The surface temperature of the glove was maintained at 27°C throughout the experiment following the recommendation in F739-07 protocol [17]. Then, 1 mL antineoplastic agent solution was dropped onto the upper side of glove and the receptor solutions were collected for 0-15, 15-30, 30-60, 60-120, and 120-240 min after the addition of antineoplastic agent solution. After collection, specimens (0.2-0.5 mL aliquots) were transferred into the polypropylene sample tubes and stored at −80°C until assay. Before use, the surface of the latex A gloves was washed with purified water to remove the surface powder and air-dried.

Analytical procedure
The concentrations of antineoplastic agents in the specimens were measured by ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectroscopy (UPLC-MS/MS). The system consisted of an ACQUITY TM binary solvent manager, ACQUITY TM sample manager, and Quattro Premier XE triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (Waters Corp., Milford, MA, USA). The capillary voltage, ion source temperature, desolvation gas temperature, desolvation gas flow, and collision cell gas flow were set at 1 kV, 120°C, 350°C, 650 L/h, and 50 L/h, respectively. An ACQUITY TM BEH AMIDE column (1.7 μm, 2.1 × 150 mm, Waters) was used for the 5FU assay and an ACQUITY TM BEH Shield RP18 column (1.7 μm, 2.1 × 100 mm, Waters) was used for the measurement of other antineoplastic agents. During the assay, column temperature was kept at 40°C using column oven built in the ACQUITY TM sample manager. The details of the chromatographic conditions and MS/MS settings are summarized in Table 2. Before UPLC-MS/MS assay, the samples (100 μL) were spiked with 10 μL internal standard solution (5 μg/mL ETP for the CPA, DXR, and PTX assay; 5 μg/mL CPA for the ETP assay; 50 ng/mL of gemcitabine for the 5FU assay), vortex mixed for 1 min, and centrifuged (5 min, 4°C, 20,000 g). Finally, 2 μL of clear supernatant was injected onto the UPLC-MS/MS system.

Evaluation of permeability
The permeation of antineoplastic agents through medical gloves was evaluated using PR and breakthrough detection time (BTT) according to the ASTM protocol D6978-05. The PR value was calculated at each time point using the following formula [17]: where C was the concentration of the antineoplastic agent in the receptor solution (ng/mL), V was the volume  of collected receptor solution (mL), t was the exposure time (min), and S was the area of the glove surface that was exposed to the antineoplastic agent (1.0 cm 2 ). The first time point at which PR values exceeded 10 ng/min/cm 2 was defined as the BTT (min) according to the ASTM D6978-05 protocol.
The cumulative permeated amount (X cum ) was the total amount of antineoplastic agent recovered in the receptor solution until each time point: X cum at time t is summation of the product of C and V in each sample fraction collected until time t.
To compare the permeation of CPA and 5FU in latex B gloves of varying thickness, we applied one-way ANOVA followed by a Student-Newman-Keuls test. Values of P < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.

Permeability of antineoplastic agents through latex and nitrile gloves
The values for X cum and PR for each antineoplastic agent at each time point are shown in Fig. 2. For latex A gloves, the values of X cum and PR of CPA and 5FU increased in a time-dependent manner (Fig. 2a); the BTT of CPA and 5FU was 60 min. Latex B gloves were less permeable to CPA and 5FU than latex A gloves (Fig. 2b) and the BTTs of CPA and 5FU were 120 and 240 min, respectively. In contrast, ETP, DXR, and PTX showed no detectable permeation through both latex A and B within the testing time (240 min); hence, the BTTs were determined as >240 min.
For nitrile gloves, as none of the five tested antineoplastic agents showed detectable permeation at any time point, the BTTs were therefore evaluated as >240 min.

Relationship between permeability and glove thickness
The values of X cum and PR (at 240 min) for CPA and 5FU through latex B gloves of various thicknesses are shown in Fig. 3. For CPA, a higher PR and shorter BTT were observed with a reduced thickness of gloves ( Fig. 3b and Table 3), which indicated that the permeability of CPA through latex B gloves was thickness dependent. The X cum of CPA through latex B gloves at 240 min also showed a thickness dependent decrease, however the 0.1 mm × 2 (double glove) demonstrated a significantly lower X cum than that of 0.2 mm glove, despite an equivalent total thickness (Fig. 3a).
The X cum and PR (at 240 min) of 5FU showed similar tendencies. The permeation of 5FU exceeded the ASTM standard in gloves with a thickness of 0.1 and 0.15 mm, but not of 0.2 mm or in the double glove, as shown in Fig. 3b. In accordance with these results, the X cum of 5FU at 240 min tended to decrease as the thickness of gloves was increased; however, the differences were not statistically significant (Fig. 3a).
In contrast, ETP, DXR, and PTX exhibited no detectable permeation through latex B gloves of any thickness at any time point and the BTTs for these agents were >240 min (Table 3).

Discussion
In this study, we performed permeability tests on medical gloves made on the same manufacturing line to assess the effects of material type, thickness, and surface treatment on the permeation of antineoplastic agents. The results of this study have several important implications. First, chlorine treatment of the glove surface affected its permeability to antineoplastic agents. Second, we confirmed that glove thickness was an important factor in determining permeability and showed that double gloving was a more effective barrier to the permeation of antineoplastic agents than a single glove of equivalent thickness.
Because previous studies indicated that MW and logP were important in determining the permeability of antineoplastic agents through medical gloves [11], we investigated the permeability using five antineoplastic agents with various MW and logP values (CPA, 5FU, DXR, ETP, and PTX) listed in the ASTM D6978-05 protocol. Although carmustine and thiotepa were also listed in the protocol as recommended compounds for permeability testing, we excluded these two agents for two reasons. First, intravenous formulations of carmustine and thiotepa are, at present, commercially unavailable in Japan. Second, the range of MW and logP values were 130.8-853.9 and -1.0-3.7, respectively, for the five antineoplastic agents (Table 1), and carmustine (MW = 214.1, logP = 1.53) [13] and thiotepa (MW = 189.2, and logP = 0.38) [19] were also within this range.
Among the five antineoplastic agents assessed in this study, only CPA and 5FU exhibited detectable permeation through gloves made of latex A and B. The PR values of CPA and 5FU through latex A gloves at the end of the testing time (240 min) were 4.79-and 20.7fold higher, respectively, than those through latex B gloves (Fig. 2). The difference in permeability was likely caused by the chlorination of glove surface during the  manufacturing process, because this was the only difference between the two materials. In everyday clinical settings, two types of latex gloves are commercially available: powdered and powder-free gloves (corresponding to latex A and B, respectively). Powder-free gloves are preferred when handling antineoplastic agents because the powder particles are considered to compromise sterile areas [7]. However, with regard to the permeability of the antineoplastic agents, direct comparisons between powdered and powder-free gloves have not been reported. In this study, we showed that powder-free (latex B) gloves were less permeable than powdered gloves (latex A) to CPA and 5FU, which indicated that the use of powder-free gloves was a reasonable method for reducing exposure to antineoplastic agents. Furthermore, our results also suggested that the manufacturing processes (especially surface treatments) should be considered when assessing the relationship between glove thickness and permeability. In contrast, none of the five tested antineoplastic agents exhibited detectable permeation through nitrile gloves with a thickness of 0.1 mm over a test time of 240 min. This observation supported the recommendations of several guidelines that suggest the use of nitrile gloves to prevent exposure to antineoplastic agents [8,9,12]. Next, the permeation of antineoplastic agents was assessed using latex B gloves of various thicknesses. The X cum of CPA through latex B gloves within 240 min decreased in a thickness-dependent manner, with 0.1 mm × 2 (double glove) exhibiting the least permeability. Similar tendencies were observed for 5FU, although the differences among the thickness of gloves were not statistically significant (Fig. 3). These results confirmed previous reports that glove thickness was an influencing factor of the permeability of gloves to antineoplastic agents [11].
In addition, we observed a time-dependent increase in the PR values of CPA and 5FU (Figs. 2 and 3), which agreed with several previous reports [10,11]. In our study conditions, C test was much higher than those in receptor solution (>700 fold), and were regarded as stable during the permeability test. Therefore, the apparent permeation clearances (CL P,app , calculated by dividing PR by C test ) were also observed to increase in a time-dependent manner, which indicated that the diffusion rate constants of antineoplastic agents within glove material were slower than those in the interface between the glove material and receptor solution. The diffusion kinetics demonstrated that PR was proportional to concentration of antineoplastic agents in the vicinity of interface between glove material and receptor solution (C inter ), rather than C test . Assuming that the diffusion rate constant in glove material was lower than that at interface, C inter would increase slowly after start of permeability test, and PR and CL P,app would also increase in a time-dependent manner until C inter and C test reached the equilibrium state.
Theoretically, the PR values of antineoplastic agents were expected to be higher as logP was higher and MW was lower, because latex is a carbohydrate polymer and highly lipophilic. Indeed, a previous study examining the permeation of various antineoplastic agents has reported such a trend [11]. The results of our study were consistent with the report: The PR value (in a single 0.1 mm glove at 240 min) for CPA (74.8 ng/min/cm 2 ) was higher than 5FU (40.0 ng/min/cm 2 ), which has lower lipophilicity compared with CPA (the logP values for 5FU and CPA are −1.0 and 0.6, respectively). Because PR is also dependent on C test , we calculated the CL P,app by dividing PR by C test (20 mg/mL and 50 mg/mL for CPA and 5FU, respectively) to normalize the difference in C test and evaluate the intrinsic permeability of antineoplastic agents through gloves. The calculated CL P,app for CPA and 5FU was 3.7 μL/min/cm 2 and 0.8 μL/min/cm 2 , respectively, and the CL P,app of CPA was approximately 4.6-fold higher than that of 5FU. The difference appears to predominantly reflect the difference in logP between CPA and 5FU, because the magnitude of difference between CPA and 5FU is larger for logP compared with the MW. However, PTX showed no detectable permeation through medical gloves tested in this study although the logP of PTX is 3.7, the highest among the five antineoplastic agents tested. This discrepancy between logP and permeability can be explained by the large MW of PTX. The large MW of PTX (853.9) appears to reduce the diffusion rate constant in glove material and results in low permeability. The same explanation is also applicable for ETP (MW = 588.6), which showed no detectable permeation despite of the comparable logP (0.6) with CPA. Similarly, 5FU showed the detectable permeation despite of low logP (-1.0), and this observation appears to be attributed to the small MW of the compound (130.8). Further elucidation is required to confirm the exact effects of the logP and MW of antineoplastic agents on the permeation through medical gloves.
Interestingly, although the total thickness was equal in both conditions, the double glove (0.1 mm × 2) blocked the permeation of CPA more effectively compared to a single 0.2 mm glove (Fig. 3). BTTs for CPA were also longer in double glove than single 0.2 mm glove (>240 min vs 240 min, respectively) ( Table 3). These results indicated that double gloving reduced the permeation of antineoplastic agents through a mechanism other than increased glove thickness, at least for CPA. Although double gloving is recommended in the ASHP guidelines on handling hazardous drugs and other guidelines [8,9,12] and is carried out in routine clinical settings, the information concerning the permeation of antineoplastic agents through double gloves is limited. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report that quantitatively evaluates the permeation of antineoplastic agents through double gloves in comparison to a single glove with equivalent thickness. The underlying mechanism of this observation remains to be elucidated in future studies, we hypothesized the diffusion rate of CPA at the contact surface of the two gloves was slower than within glove material, and consequently attenuated the permeation of CPA through the double glove.
Finally, we considered the limitations of this study. First, the permeability of carmustine and thiotepa, which are recommended test compounds in the ASTM protocol, were not assessed in this study. Because carmustine (MW = 214.1, logP = 1.53) and thiothepa (MW = 189.2, logP = 0.38) have a similar MW and higher lipophilicity than 5FU (MW = 130.8, logP = −1.0), these agents may permeate through the medical gloves assessed in this study. However, as these two agents are unavailable as intravenous formulations in Japan, we believes that the permeability test using carmustine and thiothepa was not essential for the evaluation of medical gloves used in Japanese clinical settings. Second, all experiments in this study were conducted in static condition, which may not reflect the dynamic conditions (i.e., stretching or rubbing) to which the medical gloves are exposed in usual clinical workflow. In several previous studies [11,20], permeability tests were conducted in dynamic conditions to estimate the maximum risk of permeation in real-life situations. However the exact effects of stretching or rubbing are not quantitatively determined because the permeability of same medical gloves in static conditions were not tested in these studies. Therefore, it is unclear whether our results are directly applicable to dynamic conditions, and future studies are needed to clarify the effects of stretching or rubbing on the permeability of medical gloves. The third limitation of this study is relatively short testing time. The PR values of CPA and 5FU increased in a time-dependent manner throughout the 240-min test period (Figs. 2 and 3), which indicated that the permeation of CPA and 5FU did not reached a steady state; we expect that PR values would increase with an extended testing time. In addition, it is possible that ETP, DXR, and PTX, which showed no detectable permeation within 240 min, exhibited a higher value of PR than the ASTM standard (10 ng/min/cm 2 ) at later time points. However, because some guidelines recommend the frequent change of medical gloves when handling antineoplastic agents [21], healthcare professionals do not ordinarily use the same gloves over a 240-min period in the usual clinical workflow. Therefore, we believe that a test time of 240 min was sufficient for the evaluation of the permeation risk of antineoplastic agents.

Conclusion
The permeation of five antineoplastic agents, ETP, CPA, DXR, PTX, and 5FU, through gloves was dependent on the glove material and surface treatment. In addition, the permeability of the gloves to antineoplastic agents decreased with an increase in glove thickness and double gloving was shown to efficiently reduce the antineoplastic agent permeation compared to single gloves with equivalent total thickness. Although further studies are needed to fully understand the mechanisms determining the permeation of antineoplastic agents through medical gloves, this study provides important information to facilitate the appropriate selection of medical gloves.