Terminal sterilization of medical devices using vaporized hydrogen peroxide: a review of current methods and emerging opportunities.
Abstract
Medical devices are an important and growing aspect of healthcare provision
and are increasing in complexity to meet established and emerging patient
needs. Terminal sterilization plays a vital role in the provision of safe medical
devices. While terminal sterilization technologies for medical devices include
multiple radiation options, ethylene oxide remains the predominant
nonthermal gaseous option, sterilizing c. 50% of all manufactured devices.
Vaporized hydrogen peroxide (abbreviated VH2O2 by the International
Organization for Standardization) is currently deployed for clinical sterilization
applications, where its performance characteristics appear aligned to
requirements, constituting a viable alternative low-temperature process for
terminal processing of medical devices. However, VH2O2 has operational
limitations that create technical challenges for industrial-scale adoption. This
timely review provides a succinct overview of VH2O2 in gaseous sterilization
and addresses its applicability for terminal sterilization of medical devices. It
also describes underappreciated factors such as the occurrence of nonlinear
microbial inactivation kinetic plots that may dictate a need to develop a new
standard approach to validate VH2O2 for terminal sterilization of medical devices.
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