As part of their focus
on particles, the FDA has required test method validation of your particulate
testing. Their method validation is
described as follows:
“You should describe and
validate particle counting and sizing methods. We recommend that you introduce
a known amount of various particle sizes into the test setup and quantify the
amount of particles recovered. The number of particles recovered should closely
approximate the number you artificially introduced into the system. For a
system to be considered validated, ≥90% recovery should be demonstrated for the
≥10 μm and ≥25 μm size ranges.”
Why do they say this? In my experience, larger particles settle to
the bottom of your sample container. So
if you don’t do a proper validation and sort it all out you will not get an
accurate count of the most important particle sizes. In older tests from various companies I have
reviewed this was actually happening.
So where to start with
this? First off, read ASTM F2743 for a
general guideline. You will want to do
this testing in house, the test labs (NAMSA, WuXi AppTec, Nelson, etc.) will
all do it but it will be expensive, most likely you will have to travel to
their site, and you have to validate the model you are using your device with
anyway. So just buy a HIAC 9703, which
is the same machine the test labs use, you can call them and confirm- maybe
they have upgraded by now.
You also want a good
supply of low particulate water for your testing. Low particulate water can be just reagent
grade water, buy from any chemical supply company for cheap. You also may have an internal system that can
produce low particulate water, just check in your HIAC, although it is probably
less effort to just buy the bottles of water.
All testing / flushing and rinsing should be done using this water.
During the testing you
will probably want some clean glassware, it is actually not that hard to keep
the glassware clean during the testing, rinse a clean container with low
particulate water a few times and you’re probably good to go. Just don’t dry anything with paper towels;
you’re better off air or shaking it dry.
The USP standard requires a laminar flow hood, but you’ll probably be
okay as long as the room is reasonable clean and you shut down the wood sander
before you start.
Then you’ll want to buy
some particulate standards so you can do your validation, the only source I’ve
found for these is Fisher Scientific, I prefer the Count-Cal particles and will assume you use
these particles. This is where you may
want to think about it some or just buy the following sizes 10 um, 15 um, 30
um, 70 um and 100 um. You can skip the
10 and 100 sizes and still meet the USP and FDA guidance, but if you’re going
to validate the method, you might as well do it only once and not worry about
it again. If you read the literature on
the particle standards you will see that for example the 15 um size has all
particles above 10 um. So the 15 um size
will validate the 10+ um bin, etc. The
10 um size is nice to have to show that the under 10 bin is working properly
(i.e. you are not counting everything). I’ve
seen people assume the 10 um standard is a normal distribution and that the
count above 10 um is one half of the total count, I think this is a
questionable assumption and it is better to use the 15 um size to validate the
10 um bin.
You will also note by
reading the literature that comes with the standards the count is not
calibrated, only the particle size. So
you cannot accurately use a particle count value calculated from the standard
literature to compare against, you should measure the standard yourself and use
that as your baseline. This is important
to understand and you’ll probably have to explain it to many people in
management and quality who cannot be bothered to think about it beforehand.
You’ll want to create a
custom test using the HIAC software, measure the particle sizes you’re planning
on calibrating to (i.e. at least 10, 25, and 50, probably 70 and 100), discard
the first run and display total count and run count.
The literature that
comes with the particles standards says to discard the first run on the small
particle sizes, which the machine can do automatically. The literature that comes with the particle
standard also says to discard the last run on the large particle sizes, but
this assumes you are collecting all liquid in your sample- you cannot do this
if you’re mixing with a stir bar. You
can discard the first and last runs manually, or discard just the first run and
make sure you leave some sample in the sample container when the runs are
completed.
I would set your test up
to do 5 runs total of 5 ml each and discard the first and last run you will
have to discard the last run manually. 5
runs require 25 ml of sample plus enough extra to clear the stir bar by a bit. I’m basing my experience off of small
devices, if you’re testing another type of device, adjust the volumes as appropriate,
but I would not use a smaller volume.
For the test method
validation, your tests should go something like this:
1. Wash methods, glassware and HIAC
2. Water through model / tortuous path (results
will be used as baseline)
3. Particle standard (start with largest)
4. Remaining particle standards
The first test will be
low particulate water in the sample container (ideally a 100 ml beaker- see
below). You want to ensure your water is
okay, your cleaning method is good, and your HIAC is clear. The test you just made should be used for all
testing here on out, the standard tests don’t include all particle sizes and
are of limited utility. I would perform
these steps to test:
1. Put beaker on HIAC stand, align with tape so it
is consistent every time
2. Put clean stir bar in beaker, cover with
parafilm, stir at highest speed setting
3. Wait for two minutes while stirring (recommended
in USP 788)
4. Run test
If you get poor results,
then you generally want to rinse more, using soap to wash during particulate
testing doesn’t always help unless you’re desperate and willing to rinse a
lot. Using IPA can help but also
requires a lot of rinsing, IPA should not be used except when needed, do not
use it between every test. Starting with
clean glassware and rinsing a lot with the reagent grade water is your best
bet.
Let us talk about mixing
the samples briefly. Gently shaking or
inverting the samples is not adequate.
Without stirring with the stir bar while the HIAC is testing, larger
particles (50+ um) will settle. You can
easily test this using a large particulate standard. If you test while stirring you will get a
higher particle count overall as well, is this from the stirring or did they
settle previously and now you’re counting them?
It doesn’t matter as long as your baseline is consistent with your test.
Once you’ve done this,
you’ll need to do some thinking. How are
you going to run your particulate tests long term? Basically this breaks down to what sample
volume you can collect, which depends on your model and device size. I think ideally you want to end up with at
least 50 ml of sample. One half of the
sample will be used to flush the model after use, so you have 25 ml of water to
work with for the testing. A 50 ml
sample fits nicely in a 100 ml beaker with a stir bar and the HIAC sample
collection probe fits in while still allowing stirring. You’ll want to make sure the probe is not too
close to the stir bar as the stir bar does generate particles (or bubbles which
are counted as particles).
A typical set up for a
catheter would be your appropriate tortuosity model, with fittings on both
ends, on the proximal end a touhy borst with a Y fitting, through the touhy
borst is a standard guide catheter. Your
device is delivered through the guide catheter, additional accessories devices
may be used if used with your product.
Your typical use might
end up like this, fill model with 10 ml water, fill guide catheter with 1 ml
water, perform simulated use with your device which takes 4 ml of water
(obviously varies by device volume).
Flush guide catheter with 10 ml of water, flush model with 25 ml of water. There is no magic to the quantities, you just
want a complete flush of the system you’re testing and to get around 50 ml or
more of sample water. Going forward, I’m
just going to assume your water volume is 50 ml. You may also flush through your device if
appropriate, you should be careful extra steps have a tendency to generate
particles and if they’re not done clinically, you’re just asking for
trouble.
An example of a
simulated use for a catheter would be to prepare your catheter (i.e. remove from
packaging and hydrate), place your catheter in the guide catheter, advance and
retract over a guide wire through tortuosity several times and maybe deliver a
stent. In this case you would definitely
flush through the model as the distal end of the catheter is exposed to
circulating blood. If the clinical use
was to flush through the guide catheter, you would flush through the guide
catheter as well. If the clinical use
was to flush through the catheter (i.e. a contrast injection), you would flush
through the catheter as well.
Before testing your
device, verify that your model is not generating significant amounts of particulates
and use it as a baseline. You’ll want to
make sure it has no dead zones before starting and it is best if the model can
be easily drained. If you’re using a guide catheter or other
accessory device, you may want to include that in the baseline, I would do
this. When choosing what accessory
devices to use in your baseline, use clinically relevant devices, but also
chose ones that are unlikely to generate particulates. You want a solid guide catheter and guide
wire, not something that generates a large number of particles that can obscure
the results from your device. If the
accessory devices generate too many particles you may consider other
alternatives, like plain PTFE tubing if that is reasonable.
Once your model is set
up with associated fittings and any accessory devices you want to include in
the baseline, inject 50 ml of water through, collect the effluent in the clean
sample container and drain the model into the sample container. Perform your test on the sample, I would
repeat three times, average each bin, and use this as your pre-test
baseline. You’ll probably want a
post-test baseline as well, or alternatively you could take a pre-test baseline
prior to every test. Your model should
really have very few particles and hardly ever one 50+ um.
Some people want to collect
all their samples, and then test them all, but I feel pretty strongly that you
should test your samples as you obtain them.
Letting them settle in the sample container isn’t going to do you any
favors down the road, you’ll probably get low particle counts now, but when you
need to do some comparison testing or need to make a change it will be more
difficult to reproduce.
To validate your test
and model, take the 70 um particle standard bottle and make a “standard
solution”, to make the standard solution:
1. Shake the 25 ml bottle of 70 um standard
solution vigorously for 10+ seconds
2. Pour entire 25 ml of 70 um standard solution
into a 400 ml beaker
3. Pour 200 ml of LPW into beaker
4. Pour 25 ml of LPW into the empty standard
solution bottle, rinse and then pour into the beaker
5. Put clean stir bar into 400 ml beaker and stir
at a moderate speed, do not stop stirring
6. Cover with parafilm when not in use
Now you’ll want to test 50
ml of your 70 um standard solution using the procedure above and see what you
get at the readout from the 50 um size (the 70 um particulate standard is 100%
above 50 um), you should be ballpark of the bottle count at the 50 um size (after
you take into consideration the dilution we did) and all of your runs 2-4 should
be consistent, use the average of the runs.
You should be about half of the bottle count at the 70 size, but that is
less accurate and I wouldn’t sweat it too much.
If you see your last run spike then you’re probably too close to the
stir bar and you may want to consider increasing your sample size or raising
the HIAC sample intake if possible, if you do this, repeat the test.
Once you’re happy with
those results you can inject 50 ml of the standard solution into your model,
collect the effluent and see how you do.
Average the runs from your test (discarding which runs you said you
would). Subtract your baseline result
average before you calculate the amount recovered. You want to recover more than 75% of what you
put in per the FDA guideline. The 70 um
particle size is the most challenging, which is why we started here, so don’t
worry too much if you don’t get it the first time. If you’re not recovering at least 75% of your starting particles- your
particles most likely have settled in your standard solution. Turn up your mixing on the standard solution and
start over. You’ll want to proceduralize
the mixing. If you recover more than
110% you probably want to look at your environment and wear a hair net or breathe
more through your nose or something.
Repeat with the rest of
the particle standards, you want more than 90% recovery with at least the 15 and 30 um sizes
and you have finished the particle testing test method validation.
See Part 3: Particulate Testing of Medical Devices.
See Part 3: Particulate Testing of Medical Devices.
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