Chemistry - Residual Proteins - Method validation
Protein detection methods that cannot distinguish actual contamination from material interference or cleaning agent residues create dangerous scenarios - accepting inadequately cleaned devices based on false-negative results or rejecting properly cleaned devices based on false-positives. Validating protein residue detection on specific devices ensures that the BCA assay accurately quantifies contamination despite potential interference from materials, surface treatments, or residual cleaning chemicals. Following ISO 15883-1 and AAMI ST98 requirements, this validation uses BSA (bovine serum albumin) spiking at three concentration levels to demonstrate consistent protein recovery from device unique surfaces and geometries. The validation process addresses critical variables affecting protein detection - surface roughness that traps proteins in microscopic crevices, materials that bind proteins irreversibly through chemical interactions, or cleaning agent residues that interfere with the colorimetric reaction producing erroneous results. For devices with multiple materials or complex designs, validation confirms that extraction protocols reach all surfaces where protein contamination could persist, from smooth metallic surfaces to porous polymers and textured grips that challenge extraction efficiency. Recovery studies establish acceptance criteria specific to device risk profiles - stringent limits for neurosurgical instruments where prion contamination poses catastrophic risks, moderate levels for general surgical tools, or specialized criteria for devices with unavoidable protein retention in inaccessible areas. The validation supports both manufacturing cleaning processes and reprocessing instructions provided to healthcare facilities, providing scientific justification for cleaning parameters and acceptance limits that balance safety with practical achievability. Results guide optimization of extraction conditions, cleaning validation protocols, and specification limits that regulatory reviewers accept as appropriately protective.