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Basics Of Sterile Liquids Manufacturing

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Page 1: Sterile Facilities

Basics Of Sterile Liquids Manufacturing

Page 2: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Liquids Manufacturing – Basic Tenets

• Product Protection is Highest Priority• Closed Processing is Preferred Method for Product

Protection• Ultra-clean laminar flow air is your friend• Sterile Manufacturing can be accomplished in a variety of

ways• All aspects of the manufacturing process must work

together to successfully perform sterile manufacturing• Administrative controls should not be the primary means

of performing sterile manufacturing

Page 3: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Liquids Manufacturing – What it Takes

• Clean Air• Clean Water• Cleanable Facilities• Cleanable Equipment or Single Use Equipment• Validated Systems/Validated Process• Proper Gowning• Product/Component Protection Activities & Procedures• Proper Flows• Warehousing• Quality Assurance & Quality Control Activities

Page 4: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Liquids Manufacturing – What Can DME Do

• Facility Design• HVAC System Design• Process Definition/Process Description• Unit Operation Description• Equipment Specification• Clean Utilities System Design• Equipment Sizing• Plant Utilities Design

Page 5: Sterile Facilities
Page 6: Sterile Facilities
Page 7: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Liquids Manufacturing – DME’s Deliverables

• Facility Layout Drawing(s)• Area Classification Drawing(s)• Air Flow Diagrams• Material/Personnel/Waste/Product Flow Diagrams• Electrical Single Line Drawing(s)• Lighting/Security/Fire Alarm/IT Device Plans• Equipment Arrangement Drawing(s)

Page 8: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Liquids Manufacturing – DME’s Deliverables

• PFDs• P&IDs• Equipment Specifications• Gowning Philosophy• Product Protection Philosophy

Page 9: Sterile Facilities

Glossary of Terms

• Sterile Liquid Filtration – use of a sterilizing grade, 0.2 micron-rated cartridge filter for removal of microorganisms.

• Aseptic processing – bringing sterile components and sterile product together in an extremely high quality environment to insure microorganism free filled products.

• Parenteral – pharmaceutical product that is injected into the body (vein, muscle).

• Endotoxins / Pyrogens – fever-causing cell debris.• Terminal sterilization – non-invasive sterilization of filled

container using UV or Gamma radiaton, Heat, or other means.

Page 10: Sterile Facilities

Glossary of Terms

• Barrier/Isolation Technology – strategies to isolate hazardous products from manufacturing personnel; isolation of environmental elements that may contaminate to the product.

• Cytotoxic compound – toxic compounds that have carcinogenic, mutagenic and/or teratogenic effect.

• Potent compound – a drug product that achieves a desired medical effect with a very small amount of an active ingredient.

Page 11: Sterile Facilities

Glossary of Terms

• Room Pressurization – a means of providing directional air flow in order to achieve product protection.

• Bio-burden – microbiological count or level.• Bio-burden Reduction – activity or process step

implemented in order to reduce microbe count• Laminar Flow Area – zone of clean (HEPA filtered)

directional air flow that provides high quality environmental conditions for aseptic processing.

• Uni-Directional Flow – European designation for laminar flow.

Page 12: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing Facilities – Air Quality FDA

Maximum number of particles permitted /m3

In operation

Class .5 µm 5 µm

ISO 5 3,520 29

NA NA NA

ISO 7 352,000 2,930

ISO 8 3,520,000 29,300

EUMaximum number of particles

permitted /m3

At rest In operation

GR .5µm 5µm .5µm 5µm

A 3,520 20 3,520 20NA NA NA NA NA

B 3,520 29 352,000 2,900C 352,000 2,900 3,520,000 29,000

D 3,520,000 29,000 Not defined Not defined

Page 13: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Unit Operations

• Raw Material Weighing & Dispensing

• Component Preparation

• Antigen Thawing

• Formulation

• Filling / Stoppering / Capping

• Lyophilization (Freeze-drying)

• Terminal Sterilization of Product – Cook it in a container

Page 14: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Unit Operations

• External Vial Washing

• Inspection – Manual/Automatic

• Container Closure Testing

• Coding

• Final Packaging

• CIP/SIP

• Clean Utility Generation – WFI/CS/CCA

Page 15: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Product Types

• Vaccines – Sanofi, GSK, Takeda• Oncology Drugs – Boston Biopharma, BMS• Renal/Dialysis Solutions – Haiti Project• Intravenously Administered Medicines• Analytical Products• Opthalmic Products – Imprimis• Burn Treatment Products• Biologicals - Probiomed

Page 16: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Production Issues

• Product Demand/Product Portfolio

• Batch Size/Compounding Design

• Vial Processing Speed

• Production Shift Philosophy

• Cleaning/Sterilizing Requirements

• Utility Capacity

• Equipment Utilization

• Container Inspection Approach

Page 17: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Production Issues

• Lyophilization Cycle Duration – can be days

• Lyophilizer Loading/Unloading – Partially Closed Vials

• Transport of Partially Stoppered Vials – mobile ISO 5

• Processing of Multiple Container Types – vials & syringes

• Processing Containers from Tubs – robotics required

• Sterilization of RABS & Isolators – fogging with VHP

Page 18: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Production Issues

• Fill Volume Accuracy – Correct Dosage

• Formulation Accuracy – Correct Composition

• Formulation Homogeneity – Correct Composition

• Product Integrity – Cold Chain, Purity

• Product Protection – Aseptic Simulation

• Product-Specific Process Considerations

Page 19: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing Design Guidance/Requirements

• ISPE Design Guide – Sterile Mfg Facilities

• Current Available Technology – Vendor Driven

• cGMP Requirements (FDA, MCA, EU, PICS, WHO)

• Safety Requirements (OSHA, NFPA, etc.)

• Containment Requirements

Page 20: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing Design Considerations

• Recipe Control/Data Archiving

• Control System Requirements

• Cleaning Requirements

• Material Handling and Processing

• Sterility/Pyrogen Control Requirements

Page 21: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Containment Reqts

• Hazards Classification• Levels of Protection• Equipment Design• Procedural Solutions – Time Segregation• Barrier/Isolation Technology

Page 22: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Process/Facility Issues

• Laminar Flow Areas• Closed Processing• Barriers/Isolators• Controlled Areas – local, general• Classification Criteria• Gowning, Airlocks, etc.• Line Layout

Page 23: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Facility Design Issues

• Safety vs. cGMPs• Maintenance vs. cGMPs• Electrical Classification of Processing Areas• Fire Protection of Processing Areas• Spill Containment / Cleanup Procedure• Equipment Washdown• Drainage Systems• Low Wall Returns & Return Wall Space• Firewalls/Runoff Collection System (for handling

flammables)

Page 24: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - cGMP Design Issues

• Piping Systems (Hookup Stations)• Vessel Maintenance (Lifting Systems)• Solids/Liquids Additions• Laminar Flow / Uni-Directional Zones• Formulation Vessel Design• Glovebox / BioSafety Cabinet Design• Sterile System Design

Page 25: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing – Sterility Control

• Steam-in-Place Systems• Autoclaves• Depyrogenation Ovens / Tunnels• Terminal Sterilizers• Sterile Filtration• WFI Flushes• Aseptic Processing

Page 26: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing - Pressurization Reqts

• Vessel overpressurization for product protection• Vessel overpressurization for product transfer and

filtration• Vacuum for raw material transfer• Facility overpressurization for product protection• Facility underpressurization for product

containment

Page 27: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing -Utility System Reqts

• High Purity Water– (USP purified, WFI, hot, ambient, point-of-use coolers,

subloops, etc.)• Clean Steam• Process Venting• Process Vacuum• Process Heating/Cooling/Chilling• Process Waste (solvent, contaminated aqueous)• Air / Nitrogen• Process Chilled Glycol

Page 28: Sterile Facilities

Sterile Manufacturing – Advanced Technology

• Robotic Filling• Camera Inspection