Airlocks
Airlocks
Airlocks
Supplementary Guidelines on Good Manufacturing Practices for Heating,Ventilation and Air conditioning (HVAC) Systems for Non-sterile Dosage Forms
Praphon Angtrakool Working document QAS/02.048/Rev.1 (2004) Food and Drug Administration
1. Introduction
HVAC systems assists in ensuring the manufacture of quality products and also result in operator comfort. HVAC systems design influences architectural layouts, with regard to items such as airlock positions, doorways and lobbies. The prevention of the contamination and cross-contamination is an essential design consideration of the HVAC system. The design of the HVAC system should be considered at the concept design stage.
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2. Glossary (1)
Cleanroom : A room or area with defined environmental control of particulate and microbial contamination, constructed and used in such a way as to reduce the introduction, generation and retention of contaminants within the area, and in which other relevant parameters (e.g. temperature, humidity and pressure) are controlled as necessary. Containment : A process or device to contain product, dust or contamination in one zone, preventing it from escaping to another zone.
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2. Glossary (2)
Contamination : The undesired introduction of impurities of a chemical or microbial nature, or of foreign matter, into or on to a starting material or intermediated, during processing, sampling, packaging or repackaging, storage or transport. Cross-contamination : Contamination of starting material, intermediated product or finished product with another starting material or material during production.
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3. Scope
HVAC systems for oral solid dosage facilities The three primary aspects addressed in this manual are the role that the HVAC system play in product protection personnel protection enviromental protection
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Protection Aspects
GMP Manufacturing Environment
Product Protection Contamination (Product & Staff) Protect from Product (cross-contamination) Correct temperature & humidity Personnel Protection Environment Protection
4.2.2 Uni-directional flow protection 4.2.3 Cross-contamination via HVAC supply air 4.2.4 Cross-contamination due to fan failure
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5. Personnel Protection
5.1 Protection from dust 5.2 Dust classification 5.3 Uni-directional flow protection 5.4 Point extraction 5.5 Directional airflow 5.6 Air shower 5.7 Protection enclosures 5.8 Operator comfort
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MATERIAL TRANSPORT
PROCESS CORE
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Cleanroom condition
as built : condition where the installation is complete with all services connected and functioning but with no production equipment, materials, or personnel present at rest : condition where the installation is complete with equipment installed and operation in a manner agree upon by the customer and supplier, but with no personnel present operational : condition where the installation is functioning in the specified manner, with the specified number of personnel and working in the manner agreed upon
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Cleanroom condition
as built
air
at rest
air
in operation
air
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Level of Protection Typical Zone Street, canteen Receipt & dispatch Warehousing, offices Weighing & dispensing Blending Granulation Milling Encapsulation & compression Coating Primary packing Secondary packing Non-sterile processing Rooms where filling takes place Point of fill or other aseptic operations Change rooms & airlocks External Level 1 or Unclassified Level 1 or Unclassified Level 2 background Level 3 open product Level 2 or 3 Level 2 or 3 Level 3 Level 2 Level 2 Level 2 or 3 Level 1 or Pharmaceutical Controlled or Class 100000 (in operation) Clean or Class 10000 (in operation) Critical or Class 100 (in operation) The same classification as the area they serve GMP Guides ISO Class Equivalent External ISO Class 9 ISO Class 9 ISO Class 8 background ISO 6 or 7 open product ISO Class 8 or 7 ISO Class 8 or 7 ISO Class 8 or 7 ISO Class 8 ISO Class 8 ISO Class 8 or 7 ISO Class 9 ISO Class 8 ISO Class 6 or 7 ISO Class 5 The same classification as the area they serve Typical Dress Code Outdoor clothes Appropriate to area Appropriate to area Clean garments Clean garments Clean garments Clean garments Clean garments Clean garments Clean garments Captive coat, hat and overshoes Clean garments Sterile garments Sterile garments Change to garments for the higher classification
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Back-up HEPA filter Good pre-filter extents the life of filters downsteam.
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Filter classes
Dust filters
Standard
Aerosol
Coarse
Dp > 10 m
Fine
10 m > Dp > 1 m
HEPA
Dp < 1 m
ULPA
G1 - G4 EN 779 Standard
F5 - F9
H 11 - 13 EN 1822 Standard
U 14- 17
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Classification of filters
Classification of filters according to their efficiency
Average Efficiency Integral Value Retention in % F9 H11 H12 H13 U14 85 95 99.5 99.95 99.995 Penetration 0.15 0.05 5x10-3 5x10-4 5x10-5
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Filter
HEPA or tertiary filter
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Return Air
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Return Air
Return Air
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3 4
4.1.8 Infiltration
Manufacturing facilities should be maintained at a positive pressure relative to the outside, to limit the ingress of contaminants. Where facilities are to be maintained at negative pressures relative to ambient, in order to prevent the escape of harmful products to the outside (such as penicillin and hormones), then special precaution should be taken. Negative pressure zone should, as far as possible, be encapsulated by surrounding area with clean air supplies, so that only clean air can filtrate into the controlled zone.
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45 Pa
30 Pa
15 Pa
30 Pa
15 Pa
30 Pa 15 Pa
30 Pa
15 Pa
Cascade airlock
Sink airlock
Bubble airlock
The door swing on airlocks should be such that opens to the high pressure side
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P2
ROOM 2
P2 P3 = 0.05
Airlock is most common between Class 10,000 and Class 100,000. Also used Class 100,000 to building P1 - P2 = 0.05
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Building
Anteroom
0 to +
Building
Anteroom
Pressure Control
+ to ++
Microbial growth
High T and % RH cause perspiration from operator
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Only dust particles that are greater than 10 m are visible to the naked eye with good lighting and good eyesight
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55
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Regeneration air
De-humidification
67
Humidifier
Silencer
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(1)
Description
2 N/A 2, 3 2 2 2
2 2, 3 Optional 2 N/A 3
1 := As built (ideally used to perform IQ) 2 = At rest (ideally used to perform OQ) 3 = Operational (ideally used to perform PQ)
Annex 1, 17. 4
Description
N/A
1 := As built (ideally used to perform IQ) 2 = At rest (ideally used to perform OQ) 3 = Operational (ideally used to perform PQ)
2,3
N/A
2,3
Annex 1, 17. 4
12 Months 12 Months
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24 Months 24 Months
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Reference
1. Deryck S. Supplementary guidelines on Good manufacturing practices for Heating, Ventilation and Air Condition (HVAC) Systems. Working document QAS/02.048/Rev.1. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2003 (unpublished document) 2. Good manufacturing practices for pharmaceutical products : main principles. In : WHO Expert Committee on Specification for Pharmaceutical Preparations. Thirty-seventh report. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2003, Annex 4 (WHO Technical Report Series, No. 908) 3. Guide to Good Manufacturing Practice for Medicinal Products. PE 009-2, Pharmaceutical Inspection Co-operation Scheme (PIC/S),1 July 2004. 4. Pharmaceutical Engineering Guides for New Renovated Facilities Volume 2 Oral Solid Dosage Forms, First Edition. International Society for Pharmaceutical Engineering, 1998
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