Packaging - pH test on packaging
Packaging materials intended to maintain sterility can paradoxically compromise products through chemical interaction - acidic or alkaline substances leaching from packaging alter product pH affecting stability, efficacy, or causing degradation that visual inspection cannot detect. pH testing of packaging material extracts following ISO 11607 and ISO 6588-1 ensures packaging doesn't adversely affect product stability through acid or alkali release, with cold water extraction followed by pH measurement revealing whether packaging materials release pH-altering substances. Essential for validating packaging compatibility with pH-sensitive products including pharmaceuticals degrading under acidic conditions, demonstrating packaging neutrality for regulatory submissions requiring proof of non-interaction, and investigating product degradation potentially linked to packaging interactions causing pH shifts. For sterile medical devices with moisture-sensitive materials, packaging pH testing validates that humidity control materials don't release acidic or basic compounds, adhesives used in packaging construction remain neutral after curing, and printing inks don't migrate releasing pH-altering substances. The cold water extraction simulates condensation or humidity exposure that could solubilize packaging components, provides conservative assessment of potential pH effects, and enables comparison across packaging material options during development. Manufacturing validation confirms packaging lots maintain consistent pH neutrality, supplier changes don't introduce materials with problematic pH characteristics, and aging studies demonstrate packaging maintains neutrality throughout shelf life. For pharmaceutical combination products, packaging pH compatibility proves critical where even slight pH shifts compromise drug stability, affect preservative efficacy, or alter active ingredient solubility impacting therapeutic performance.