Sterilization is 無菌組織または血管系に接触する医療機器の患者安全を確保するため、生存可能な微生物を除去する検証されたプロセス。
Complete Guide to Sterilization
Sterilization is a critical process for medical devices that come into contact with sterile body tissues or the vascular system. It involves validated methods to achieve a defined sterility assurance level (SAL), typically 10⁻⁶, meaning the probability of a viable microorganism being present is less than one in a million.
Common sterilization methods:
1. Ethylene Oxide (EtO) Sterilization
- Low-temperature process (37-63°C)
- Suitable for heat-sensitive materials
- Penetrates packaging and device lumens
- Regulated by ISO 11135
- Requires aeration to remove residuals
- Environmental concerns due to emissions
2. Gamma Radiation Sterilization
- Uses Cobalt-60 isotope radiation
- Room temperature process
- Excellent material penetration
- Suitable for sealed, final packages
- Regulated by ISO 11137-1, 11137-2
- Can affect polymer properties
3. E-beam (Electron Beam) Sterilization
- Uses accelerated electrons
- Faster than gamma radiation
- Lower penetration depth
- Regulated by ISO 11137-1, 11137-2
- More precise dose control
- Growing popularity for sustainability
4. Steam Sterilization (Autoclave)
- High temperature (121-134°C) with saturated steam
- Most economical method
- Limited to heat-stable materials
- Regulated by ISO 17665
- Common for reusable surgical instruments
- Short cycle times
Sterility Assurance Level (SAL):
The probability of a single viable microorganism occurring on a product after sterilization:
- SAL 10⁻⁶ - Standard for most medical devices
- SAL 10⁻³ - Low-temperature sterilization, some Class I devices
Validation requirements:
Manufacturers must demonstrate:
- Installation Qualification (IQ)
- Operational Qualification (OQ)
- Performance Qualification (PQ)
- Routine monitoring and revalidation
- Bioburden testing before sterilization
- Sterility testing after sterilization
Key standards:
- ISO 11135 - EtO sterilization
- ISO 11137 (parts 1-3) - Radiation sterilization
- ISO 17665 (parts 1-3) - Steam sterilization
- ISO 11138 - Biological indicators
- ISO 11737 - Microbiological methods
Regulatory considerations:
- Must be validated according to ISO standards
- Part of Quality Management System (ISO 13485)
- Included in Design History File (DHF)
- Critical for Class II and III sterile devices
- Requires stability testing post-sterilization
Related Terms
More Compliance & Standards
View allNeed Help with Global Registration?
Pure Global provides regulatory consulting and AI-powered tools to help medical device companies navigate Global market access.

