Water Testing System
Water Testing System
Water Testing System
EARLY EVERY PHARMACEUTICAL manufacturer uses water as a raw material. Whether it is an ingredient in the final product, a component used in the manufacture of the final product, or a cleaning agent used to rinse final product from the manufacturing process, water can be a vector for microbial contamination. Bacteria will proliferate in water with very little encouragement. For this reason, microbiological analysis is a very important part of the validation of any water purification system. At the same time, specific guidance on the how, what, and when of the analysis is scattered and scarce. The compendia and the regulatory guidelines offer some direction, but they dont provide all the answers. To make matters worse, the terminology often seems too flexible for a regulatory validation; this is a world of most probable numbers, colony-forming units, and indicator organisms. This article will answer some common questions that this contract microbiologist has encountered over the years.
as well. Your contact laboratory should provide you with sample containers used by its TOC analyzers autosampler. This will minimize the potential of contamination during transfer of water from container to vial. Although TOC is actually a chemical analysis, the hold time becomes important, as any microbes in the sample can fix carbon dioxide into organic carbon, thereby artificially increasing TOC over time. Ask your laboratory for data validating TOC sample hold time and methodology.
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plate count. If the data arent available for over a week, and the water has been long used by the time the data are available, how useful was the data? As stated by USP <1231>: The advantages of recovering injured microbes, slow growers, or fastidious bacteria should be balanced against the need to have a timely investigation and to take corrective action, as well as the ability of these microorganisms to detrimentally affect products or processes3. The more sensitive the product (parenteral, inhalant), the more sensitive the test should be.
Figure 1: P. Cepacia-related product recalls Date March 2000 August 2000 March 2004 Recall Class II recall of moisturizing lotion Class II recall of contaminated baby wipes Voluntary recall of contaminated 12-hour nasal spray Voluntary recall of sublingual CO2 sensors stored in contaminated buffered saline.
February 2004 Class II recall of aloe vera lotion sold to hospitals May 2004
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