Biocomp - in vivo sensitization - GPMT
Delayed hypersensitivity reactions represent medical device manufacturers' nightmare - patients tolerate initial exposure yet develop severe allergic responses upon subsequent contact, triggering recalls, litigation, and regulatory action long after market release. The Guinea Pig Maximization Test remains the regulatory gold standard for sensitization assessment per ISO 10993-10, required for devices with prolonged or repeated skin contact including wound dressings, surgical gloves, electrode gels, and externally communicating devices. This comprehensive protocol evaluates both polar and non-polar extracts through intradermal induction with Freund's adjuvant maximizing immune response, topical boosting building antibody levels, and challenge phases that reveal sensitization potential even for weak sensitizers. Regulatory submissions worldwide require sensitization data for specific device categories - skin-contacting devices over 24 hours where repeated exposure enables sensitization, mucosal membrane devices, breached surface devices contacting sterile tissue, and all implantables per ISO 10993-1 biological evaluation requirements. The 14-week protocol encompasses detailed planning establishing test concentrations and vehicle selection, animal acclimatization ensuring health stability, multiple exposure phases building immune response, and careful scoring of dermal responses using standardized criteria enabling regulatory comparison. For medical devices incorporating known sensitizers like nickel, latex proteins, or certain adhesives, GPMT demonstrates whether material processing adequately reduces sensitization risk or whether alternative materials require consideration. The adjuvant potentiation maximizes test sensitivity detecting sensitization that clinical exposure might eventually cause, providing worst-case assessment protecting vulnerable populations. Materials passing GPMT enable confident market introduction while failures trigger reformulation, processing modifications reducing extractable sensitizers, or enhanced patient warnings about allergy risks.