Biocomp - in vivo acute systemic toxicity
Systemic toxicity from medical devices represents the ultimate safety concern - localized reactions prove manageable yet substances entering bloodstream and distributing systemically can cause organ damage, neurological effects, or death. Acute systemic toxicity testing per ISO 10993-11 evaluates potential adverse effects from systemic exposure to device extracts through intravenous and intraperitoneal injection in mouse models, providing fundamental safety data required for all medical devices by ISO 10993-1. The protocol involves injecting both polar and non-polar extracts prepared according to ISO 10993-12, with clinical observations over 72 hours detecting various toxic endpoints including mortality, morbidity, behavioral changes, and organ-specific effects. Regulatory requirements mandate systemic toxicity testing for all device categories beyond surface devices with intact skin contact - implants where chronic substance leaching creates systemic exposure, blood-contacting devices where extractables directly enter circulation, and externally communicating devices where substances might reach systemic circulation through breached barriers. The dual injection route approach ensures detection of toxicity regardless of absorption kinetics - intravenous administration providing immediate systemic exposure while intraperitoneal injection simulates slower absorption from tissue spaces. For devices with extended contact duration, systemic toxicity testing demonstrates that cumulative exposure throughout intended use remains safe, supporting risk assessment per ISO 10993-17. The 72-hour observation captures both acute effects occurring immediately and delayed toxicity manifesting hours after exposure, providing comprehensive safety assessment. Manufacturing validation confirms processing reduces extractable toxins, sterilization doesn't generate systemically toxic degradation products, and material changes don't introduce new safety concerns requiring retesting.