Preventive Cross Contamination
Preventive Cross Contamination
Preventive Cross Contamination
– Contamination In Pharmaceutical
Dosage Forms
Equipment
Should have smooth surfaces free from pitting. Contact surfaces should be inert, should
not be additive or absorptive. Use dedicated equipments which are difficult to clean.
Equipment cleaning aids like bristles, brushes, shedding clothes, etc. that raise dust or
generate contamination should not be used. Manufacturer must ensure that all materials
of previous product manufactured are removed and after cleaning there should be no
residual cleaning agent left behind. Repair and maintenance operations should not present
any hazard to the quality of the product. Wrap the cleaned equipment with polythene
bags until use.
People
All personnel prior to and during employment as appropriate should undergo health
examination. Personnel should wear clean body coverings appropriate to the duties they
perform. Direct contact should be avoided between the operator’s hand and starting
materials, primary packing materials and intermediate and finished products. Appropriate
personnel protective equipments (PPE’s) should be used wherever applicable.
Manufacturing
At every stage of processing, raw material, intermediate or printing material should be
free from microbial and other contaminants. It is more scientific that by removing outer
wrapping of the packaging material in which they are delivered before being issued to the
shop floor reduces the bio burden and other contaminants.
The most important factor is monitoring, training and inculcating of these modules and
the importance should be well understood.
Conclusion
Validation of equipment cleaning procedures should be practiced in pharmaceutical
industries to prevent cross-contamination of drug products. The most important benefit of
conducting equipment cleaning validation is to identify and correct the potential
problems previously unsuspected which could compromise the safety, efficacy and
quality of subsequent batches of drug product produced within the equipment.
Consider what levels of residue can be tolerated in the equipment after cleaning. Toxicity
data can be useful in calculating permissible residue limits. Companies are required to
qualify the cleaning materials and to be sure that these materials are suitable and of
consistent quality. Failure to prevent cross-contamination may cause dire consequence on
the consumer and expensive materials to be scrapped as waste which invites regulatory
action if contamination issues are not thoroughly investigated and addressed.
References
Pharmaceutical Inspection Convention and Pharmaceutical Inspection Co-
operation Scheme. Validation Master Plan Installation and Operational
Qualification: Non Sterile Process Validation Geneva, Switzerland. 2004.
J A. Constance. “Why Some Dust Control Exhaust Systems Don’t Work”. Pharm.
Engineering. 1983.
Ash Stevens. Cross-contamination is a major concern for pharmaceutical
manufacturers. Cleanroom Technology. March 2010.
Gary A. Baker. A guide to designing cleaning procedures for CMO’s.
Good Manufacturing Practice or Medicinal Products in the European Community.
Brussels, Commission of the European Communities. 1992.
Quality Assurance of Pharmaceuticals. A compendium of guidelines and related
materials. Volume 2. Good Manufacturing Practices and Inspection. Geneva,
World Health Organization. 1999.