RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Best Practices to Quantify and Identify Particulate Matter on the Interior Surfaces of Single-Use Systems JF PDA Journal of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology JO PDA J Pharm Sci Technol FD Parenteral Drug Association (PDA) SP 90 OP 99 DO 10.5731/pdajpst.2022.012755 VO 78 IS 1 A1 Wormuth, Klaus A1 Gaston, Fanny A1 Gauthier, Melanie A1 Cantin, Veronique A1 Montenay, Nelly YR 2024 UL http://journal.pda.org/content/78/1/90.abstract AB The manufacturing of a wide range of biopharmaceuticals, from antibodies and vaccines to cell-based therapies, increasingly takes place in single-use processing equipment. Manufactured in clean rooms and sealed and sterilized, single-use systems (SUSs) are ready-to-use and easily scalable. Controls in the “clean-build” manufacturing of SUSs reduce the probability of occurrence of particulate matter in SUSs. However, the size, complexity, and limited transparency of SUSs clearly limit the detectability of particulate matter on the interior (fluid-contacting) surfaces of a SUS during a visual inspection, as demonstrated in a recent study. In applications downstream of final filters or in aseptic processing, particulate matter on the surfaces of a SUS could detach and contaminate the final drug product. A realistic assessment of this risk requires reliable test methods that quantify and identify particulate matter present on the interior surfaces of SUSs. Clearly problematic is the common certification of the cleanliness of a SUS via a force-fit adaptation of the pharmacopeial standard USP <788> entitled “Particulate Matter in Injections”. USP <788> does not describe a procedure for extraction of particulate matter from the interior surfaces of SUSs. In addition, application of Method 1 Light Obscuration significantly limits the probability of detection for particles in the visible size range (≥ 100 µm). In this article, we describe best practices for extracting, counting, sizing, and chemically identifying particulate matter on the interior surfaces of SUSs. Highly effective procedures for the extraction of particulate matter result from application of the qualification methodology described in a recently published ASTM standard. Filtration of the liquid extract concentrates particulate matter onto the surface of a membrane filter, allowing rapid particle counting and sizing using automated membrane microscopy, along with detailed chemical identification using infrared microscopy and/or automated confocal Raman microscopy.