The Potential Clinical Relevance Of Visible Particles In Parenteral Drugs

Visible particulates (VP) are one subclass of defects seen during the final visual inspection of parenteral products and are currently one of the top ten reasons for recalls 1,2. The risk posed by particles is still unclear with limited experience reported in humans but remains an important consideration during the manufacture and use of parenteral products. From the experimental and clinical knowledge of the distribution of particulate matter in the body, clinical complications would include events occurring around parenteral administration e.g., as a result of mechanical pulmonary artery obstruction and injection site reaction, or sub-acute or chronic events e.g., granuloma. The challenge is to better understand the implication for patients of single vials with VP and align the risk with the probabilistic detection process used by manufacturers for accept/reject decisions of individual units of product.

Author
L Doessegger Et Al
Origin
Pharma Dev Safety Risk Management, Basel, Switzerland
Journal Title
J Pharmaceutical Science 101 8 2012 2635-2644 Doi: 10.1002/Jps.23217
Sector
Container glass
Class
C 4700

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The Potential Clinical Relevance Of Visible Particles In Parenteral Drugs
J Pharmaceutical Science 101 8 2012 2635-2644 Doi: 10.1002/Jps.23217
C 4700
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