Aseptic Blow
Aseptic Blow
Aseptic Blow
Since its introduction into the North American pharmaceutical market more than 40 years
ago, blow-fill-seal (BFS) aseptic processing has established itself as a highly efficient and
safe system for the filling and packaging of sterile pharmaceutical liquids and other
healthcare products, such as creams and ointments. BFS product usage has been widely
established in the ophthalmic and respiratory therapy markets for some time, and lately
BFS technology has been gaining increasing worldwide acceptance in the parenteral drug
marketplace, replacing traditional glass vial processing in a growing number of
applications.
BFS enables a container to be molded from plastic, aseptically filled and hermetically
sealed in one continuous, integrated and automatic operation, without human
manipulation. The process provides flexibility in container design and system
changeovers, high volume product output, low operational costs and a high assurance of
product sterility. The inherent safety of the process – packaging sterile products under
aseptic conditions without human intervention – has led the FDA, and the United States
Pharmacopoeia, to characterize BFS technology as an "advanced aseptic process",
indicating its use as a preferred technology.
Aseptic processing handles components, materials and equipment in such a manner that
foreign microbial and endotoxin contaminents that exceed pre-determined acceptable
levels, are not introduced to the product stream. To this end, it is critical that all storage,
conveying, filling and container sealing stages be carefully controlled at each step of the
process to maintain sterility of the product. Traditional aseptic processing, involving
filling open glass bottles or vials, requires that the manufacturer maintain aseptic
conditions in critical processing areas at all times. Unfortunately, the majority of liquid
drug product contamination over the past several decades has come about from products
produced in traditional aseptic processing facilities.
Personnel Intervention in Traditional Aseptic Critical Areas
Ordinary walking by a person emits roughly 10,000 skin particles per minute. Such
particles can and do hold microbial contamination. A rip in a worker’s uniform, a
momentary exposed wrist, a mask placed too low on the nose or physical contact with an
open fill port will increase microbial contamination within a critical area.
According to the FDA’s guide, airborne contamination is directly related to the number
of people working in a cleanroom and the level of congregation by personnel in areas
where critical aseptic manipulations are performed. Isolation of personnel from these
critical areas would eliminate the major source of contamination in traditional aseptic
processing.
Mold is common flora found on floors, walls and ceilings of buildings. Contamination
occurs due to the retention of water in cracks, edges and joints that are susceptible
because of inadequate sealing. Brooms, mops and anything used for cleaning can become
contaminated and increase atmospheric contamination because of raised dust or splashing
water. In traditional aseptic processing, significant manual intervention is required in
critical areas to maintain compliance with established sterile mandates.
Bulk solution prepared under low bioburden or sterile conditions is delivered to the
machine through a product delivery system that has been previously sterilized using an
automated steam-in-place process.
Modern BFS machines are fully automated, designed to require minimum human access
and operate in a classified environment using the following steps: (a) granules of a
polymer resin, conforming to a predetermined set of specifications, such as polyethylene,
polypropylene, co-polymers or other blow-moldable resins, are pneumatically conveyed
from a non-classified area into the hopper of the BFS machine, from which the plastic is
fed into a multi-zone rotating screw extruder which produces a sterile homogenous
polymer melt (160–250 degrees C); (b) then to a parison head which produces hollow
tubular forms of the hot resin (called parisons). The parisons are prevented from
collapsing by a stream of sterile filtered support air. Some high-speed BFS machines
have up to sixteen parisons being formed simultaneously; (c) container mold(s) close
around the parisons, and the bottom of the parison is pinched closed, while the top is held
open in a molten state; (d) the container is formed in the mold by blowing sterile air or
creating a vacuum; (e) filling needles deposit the stipulated volume of product into the
container; (f) the filling needles are withdrawn, and the upper part of the mold closes to
form and seal the upper part of the BFS container; (g) the mold is opened and the
completed, filled containers are conveyed out of the BFS machine to a remote station
where excess plastic is removed and the finished product is then conveyed to final
packaging.
Various in-process control parameters, such as container weight, fill weight, wall
thickness and visual defects provide information that is monitored and facilitates ongoing
process control.
The forming, filling and sealing steps are achieved in one unit operation – the cycle being
completed within seconds. Automation of BFS process steps eliminates manual
intervention and reduces risk to the product. No production personnel are present in the
filling room during normal operation.
Challenge studies have been conducted on the sterility levels of advanced BFS
technology, which demonstrate a uniform capability of achieving contamination rates not
exceeding 0.001 percent throughout the entire process. Even higher sterility assurance
levels, approaching 0.000001 percent, have been achieved using high levels of airborne
microbiological challenge particles.
Control of air quality is critical for sterile drug product manufacture. BFS equipment
design typically employs the use of specialized measures to reduce microbial
contamination and particle levels that can contaminate the exposed product. The BFS
process inherently produces a very low level of particulate matter and much of potential
BFS microbial contamination (viable) in the air is mitigated by the absence of manual
intervention in its critical areas. Non-viable particles generated during the plastic
extrusion, cutting, and sealing processes are controlled. Provisions for carefully
controlled airflow protect the product by forcing created particles outward while
preventing any inflow from the adjacent environment. These “zones of protection” can
also incorporate designs that separate them from the surrounding environment, providing
additional product protection.
The BFS critical processing zone is continually supplied with HEPA-filtered air by an air
shower device (shroud). The BFS critical zone is the area where the containers are
exposed during filling. Air in the critical zone meets Class 100 (ISO 5) microbiological
standards during operations. The critical zone is continuously monitored to ensure a
positive differential pressure is maintained between the shroud and the adjacent
cleanroom.
The packaging needs for pharmaceutical liquids are quite demanding. It is not unusual for
degradation of the product to occur during processing or while in transit. The physical
properties of liquids can be altered with inadequate packaging components. For aseptic
filling, the package must be produced, stored, filled and sealed under conditions that
preserve sterility. Likewise, the appearance of particulates in sterile solutions is equally
undesirable.
Glass, although a standard in the aseptic pharmaceutical liquids industry, is not without
its limitations. There is the safety issue – glass vials are subject to breakage, both in
transit and while being administered. Handling glass containers always involves a certain
amount of risk of lacerations and glass splinters. Glass ampoules, for example, generate a
fine array of small glass particles during opening.
Manufacturers using glass containers are also subjected to design limitations when the
designs become somewhat complex. With glass containers, as design complexity
increases so does the cost. Once glass containers are produced, they need to be
transported to the aseptic facility. Glass is typically transported in cardboard boxes that
can contain mold spores, such as Penicillin sp. and Aspergillus sp., as well as bacteria
like Bacillus sp. Paper, also used in the shipping of glass, can also contain mold spores.
The rubber closures used on the glass containers can have mold contamination.
Domestic drug companies have been slow to change to plastic, primarily due to the
existing installed base of glass production of small-volume parenteral drugs in the United
States. However, the same is not the case with new drugs that are coming onto the
market. These are more frequently being looked at, and submitted for FDA approval, in
plastic containers produced by advanced BFS aseptic processing. Supporting this move is
that the BFS processing resins, polyethylene and polypropylene, are generally considered
inert by the FDA. Many of the blow molding resins used in BFS processing have
received international acceptance as suitable for food and drug applications, and many of
the drug products produced outside of the United States can be found packaged with
these resins.
With the continued refinement of BSF technology, its acknowledgment by the FDA as a
preferred technology for aseptic processing, and its growing acceptance by drug
companies, the migration from glass to plastic containers used for aseptic pharmaceutical
liquids is growing rapidly. It has become more cost effective to use plastic containers for
aseptic liquids, which effectively costs manufacturers one-third of the cost of glass.
Plastic is less expensive to ship because the containers are lighter. For small-volume
parenterals, the use of plastic is inevitable, and increasingly being considered for these
reasons.
Although many BFS systems make available only a limited number of container choices
within each container category, some BFS machines do allow for broad versatility in
container design. Advanced BFS machines can design virtually any container mold
through the use of sophisticated CAD/CAM technology and 3-D modeling. These design
systems, when interfaced with the latest in CNC and EDM machinery, ensure fabrication
of key components to precise tolerances.
BFS machine designs also allow for mounting of separate sterile items (inserts) within
the BFS container, and in-mold coding and engraving, which provide further
opportunities for innovative design over that of glass products.
Machine models are available that can produce containers ranging in size from 0.1mL to
1000mL at production rates of 15,000 units per hour, depending on container
configuration. BFS machine efficiency is very high. More advanced BFS machines can
approach 99 percent uptime efficiency, which is significantly higher than traditional
aseptic processing which is plagued with slow-downs in part because of manual
interventions. To further minimize potentials of system downtime, some manufacturers
are now segmenting their high-volume process lines into more short-run lines, in the
event that if one of the lines goes down for maintenance or repair, it will not stop the
entire production throughput.
When aseptic throughput is interrupted, or not running because of downtime, the entire
process line is affected, which represents a significant production loss to the
manufacturer.
These are advances that are significant, if not fully realized yet within the aseptic liquid
pharmaceutical marketplace. But it is apparent that advanced BFS aseptic technology is
destined to become a major player in this arena.