Chemistry - Residual hemoglobin - method validation
Blood detection methods that cannot distinguish actual hemoglobin from optical interference generated by device materials produce unreliable results that undermine cleaning validation and reprocessing protocols. Validating hemoglobin detection for specific device materials ensures accurate blood contamination measurement despite potential optical interference from colored materials, surface coatings, or metal ions that affect spectrophotometric readings at 405nm. Following ISO 15883-1 and AAMI ST98 requirements, this validation uses hemoglobin spiking at three concentration levels to demonstrate consistent recovery from device unique surfaces and materials. The alkaline extraction methodology must be proven compatible with device materials without causing degradation that could create false readings or mask actual contamination through color changes. Recovery studies establish that cleaning validation programs reliably detect blood residues at clinically relevant levels, typically targeting 70-130% recovery rates that account for matrix effects while maintaining measurement reliability. For colored devices or those with metallic surfaces, validation addresses potential interference through background correction and establishes device-specific acceptance criteria accounting for unavoidable optical effects. This validated method enables routine quality control testing at lower cost than total protein analysis while maintaining correlation with overall cleaning effectiveness, supporting efficient process monitoring during reprocessing validation. The validation proves particularly valuable for devices where visual blood staining creates obvious contamination but quantification requires validated methodology for regulatory submissions and process capability demonstration.