Microbio - Sterility of BIs (spore suspension)
Standard biological indicator formats sometimes fail to challenge the most difficult sterilization scenarios - complex device lumens, densest packaging configurations, or liquid sterilization processes where traditional BIs prove inadequate. Biological indicator spore suspension testing provides flexibility for challenging sterilization validation scenarios where standard BI formats prove inadequate, enabling customized inoculation levels, precise placement in difficult-to-sterilize locations, and validation of liquid sterilization processes. Following ISO 11138 requirements, spore suspension filtration and culture techniques enable accurate enumeration before and after sterilization, permitting precise calculation of log reduction values essential for statistical validation. This approach proves invaluable for validating sterilization of complex devices with lumens where suspension inoculation ensures spores reach internal surfaces, investigating sterilization failures where standard BIs show inconsistent results requiring higher challenge levels, and developing new sterilization processes requiring non-standard challenge conditions. The suspension format allows accurate enumeration of viable spores before sterilization exposure establishing precise initial bioburden, then post-sterilization culture quantifies survivors enabling calculation of exact log reduction achieved. For devices with internal channels, suspension inoculation ensures spores deposit throughout lumens rather than just at openings, providing worst-case challenge that standard BIs cannot achieve. Manufacturing validation for combination products or novel device designs often requires customized BI placement that standard formats cannot accommodate, with suspension application enabling precise contamination of specific surfaces or internal volumes. The flexibility supports investigation of sterilization variables - testing different spore loads to establish overkill margins, evaluating impact of packaging on sterilization effectiveness, or validating that process modifications maintain adequate lethality.