Biocomp - USP Class VI - Intracutaneous test
Injection site reactions determine patient compliance and product success - painful, inflamed injection sites cause treatment abandonment even when therapeutic efficacy proves excellent. USP Class VI intracutaneous testing per USP <88> provides pharmaceutical-grade validation of injection site compatibility through intradermal administration of extracts prepared under multiple conditions meeting pharmaceutical industry requirements. The protocol employs systematic extraction at three temperatures using both saline and vegetable oil vehicles, with scoring following established criteria evaluating erythema, edema, and necrosis at injection sites. Device applications include prefilled syringes where injection site reactions affect patient compliance and treatment adherence, insulin delivery devices requiring daily injections where local toxicity proves particularly problematic, and parenteral drug delivery systems where local tolerance influences therapeutic success and patient satisfaction. The multiple extraction conditions provide safety margins exceeding typical use conditions, capturing worst-case scenarios through elevated temperature extraction representing accelerated aging or stress conditions. For drug-device combination products, intracutaneous testing reveals whether device extractables exacerbate drug-induced local reactions, supporting formulation optimization and container selection minimizing injection pain. The pharmaceutical industry acceptance of USP Class VI standards simplifies material qualification across multiple applications, while the testing provides competitive advantage demonstrating superior local compatibility. Manufacturing validation confirms processing maintains low extractable levels, sterilization doesn't increase local toxicity, and stability studies demonstrate maintained compatibility throughout shelf life preventing aged products from causing increased injection site reactions.