Cleaning validation

Cleaning validation is the methodology used to assure that a cleaning process removes residues of the active pharmaceutical ingredients of the product manufactured in a piece of equipment, the cleaning aids utilized in the cleaning process and the microbial attributes.[1] All residues are removed to predetermined levels to ensure the quality of the next product manufactured is not compromised by waste from the previous product and the quality of future products using the equipment, to prevent cross-contamination and as a GMP requirement.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has strict regulation about the cleaning validation. For example, FDA requires firms to have written general procedures on how cleaning processes will be validated. Also, FDA expects the general validation procedures to address who is responsible for performing and approving the validation study, the acceptance criteria, and when revalidation will be required. FDA also require firms to conduct the validation studies in accordance with the protocols and to document the results of studies.The valuation of cleaning validation is also regulated strictly, which usually mainly covers the aspects of equipment design,cleaning process written, analytical methods and sampling. Each of these processes has their related strict rules and requirements. Regarding to the establishment of limits, FDA does not intend to set acceptance specifications or methods for determining whether a cleaning process is validated. But some limits that have been mentioned by industry include analytical detection levels such as 10 PPM, biological activity levels such as 1/1000 of the normal therapeutic dose and organoleptic levels.[2][3][4]

Cleaning Validation in the context of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient manufacture may be defined as: "The process of providing documented evidence that the cleaning methods employed within a facility consistently controls potential carryover of product (including intermediates and impurities), cleaning agents and extraneous material into subsequent product to a level which is below predetermined levels".

References

  1. Agalloco, James (1992). "'Points to consider' in the validation of equipment cleaning procedures". PDA Journal of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology. 46 (5): 163–8. PMID 1432455.
  2. Jenkins, KM; Vanderwielen, AJ; Armstrong, JA; Leonard, LM; Murphy, GP; Piros, NA (1996). "Application of total organic carbon analysis to cleaning validation". PDA Journal of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology. 50 (1): 6–15. PMID 8846061.
  3. Leblanc, Destin A (1998). "Establishing scientifically justified acceptance criteria for cleaning validation of finished drug products". Pharmaceutical Technology. 22 (10): 136–48. ISSN 0147-8087. INIST:2430841.
  4. FDA guidance Validation of Cleaning Processes


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.