Microbio - Sterility of BIs (strips, threads, discs)
Sterilization validation stands or falls on biological indicator performance - if BIs contain too few spores, sterilization appears more effective than reality, too many and validation becomes unnecessarily stringent, while contaminated BIs create false failures that waste resources investigating phantom problems. Sterility testing of biological indicators validates the effectiveness of sterilization processes by confirming complete spore inactivation following ISO 11138-1 and ISO 11138-2 requirements. Whether testing spore strips, discs, wires, or self-contained systems, this analysis provides definitive evidence that sterilization parameters achieve required sterility assurance levels through complete biological challenge elimination. The 7-14 day incubation period at optimal growth temperatures ensures detection of even sublethally damaged spores that might recover under favorable conditions, preventing false-negative results that could validate inadequate sterilization. For sterilization validation, BI testing confirms that validated cycle parameters consistently achieve 6-log spore reduction supporting regulatory submissions and routine cycle monitoring that maintains process control. The test accommodates various BI formats used in different sterilization methods - steam sterilization using Geobacillus stearothermophilus, ethylene oxide using Bacillus atrophaeus, hydrogen peroxide using Geobacillus stearothermophilus, and radiation using Bacillus pumilus - with specific recovery media and incubation conditions optimized for each spore type. Manufacturing facilities rely on BI sterility testing to validate that fractional positive results during validation studies reflect genuine sterilization kinetics rather than BI contamination or handling errors. The negative results following sterilization provide confidence that biological challenge elimination occurred, while positive controls confirm BI viability and culture conditions adequacy preventing false-negative results from dead spores or inadequate growth conditions.