TY - JOUR T1 - Achieving ″Zero″ Defects for Visible Particles in Injectables JF - PDA Journal of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology JO - PDA J Pharm Sci Technol DO - 10.5731/pdajpst.2018.009027 SP - pdajpst.2018.009027 AU - Jennifer Johns AU - Paolo Golfetto AU - Tia Bush AU - Gianmaurizio Fantozzi AU - John Shabushnig AU - Anthony Perry AU - Fran DeGrazio AU - Dorothee Streich AU - Jahanvi Miller AU - Herve Soukiassian AU - Amy Stanton AU - Rick Watson Y1 - 2018/01/01 UR - http://journal.pda.org/content/early/2018/08/29/pdajpst.2018.009027.abstract N2 - The reduction of visible particles in injectable products is an important element in the consistent delivery of high-quality parenteral products. An important part of this effort is the control of particles that may emanate from the primary packaging materials. The Parenteral Drug Association (PDA), with the support of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Forum (PMF) has undertaken the task of developing test methods to assess the cleanliness of primary packaging components used in the manufacture of sterile injectable products. Further work is focused on end-to-end analysis of the supply chain to identify additional points where particles may enter the finished product workflow. This includes shipment, receipt, transfer and fill and finishing operations. This information and appropriate corrective actions and control methods, coupled with appropriate patient risk-based acceptance limits, are intended to provide better and more consistent supply of injectable products that meet current compendial and Good Manufacturing (GMP) expectations. Aligning control limits between supplier and pharmaceutical manufacturers will offer further improvement. This paper describes the formation of a task force to address these needs and current progress to date. ER -