PDA Technical Glossary

PDA Technical Glossary

PDA Technical Reports are highly valued membership benefits because they offer expert guidance and opinions on important scientific and regulatory topics and are used as essential references by industry and regulatory authorities around the world. These reports include terms which explain the material and enhance the reader’s understanding.

The database presented here includes the glossary terms from all current technical reports. The database is searchable by keyword, topic, or by technical report. Each definition provided includes a link to the source technical report within the  PDA Technical Report Portal.

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Airlock
Analyte
Substance (usually a residue) for which an analysis is being performed. (TR29) (TR49) (TR70) A specific chemical moiety being measured, which can be intact drug, biomolecule or its derivative, impurity, and/or excipients in a drug product. [Synonym: measurand] (TR57)
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Antimicrobial Chemical Agent
Substance used to destroy or suppress the growth of microorganisms, whether bacteria, fungi, or viruses, on inanimate objects and surfaces. (TR70)
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Area Disinfection
Aseptic Processing Area (APA)
Controlled environment, consisting of several zones, in which the air supply, facility, materials, equipment and personnel are regulated to control microbial and particulate contamination to acceptable levels. (TR22) (TR28) (TR62) (TR70)
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Bioburden
The total number of microorganisms per unit of material prior to sterilization. (TR13) Total number of viable microorganisms on or in a health care product prior to sterilization. (TR22)(TR61)(TR62) A population of viable microorganisms in a fluid prior to sterilizing filtration. (TR26) A measure of the contaminating organisms found in or on a given amount of material before it undergoes a sterilization process. (TR45) (TR70) The number of detectable microorganisms (bacteria and fungi) with which an object is contaminated. It is measured in CFU (colony forming units). (TR47) The number of viable, contaminating microorganisms present on a product immediately prior to decontamination. (TR51) Viable microbial contaminants associated with personnel manufacturing environments (air and surfaces), equipment, product packaging, raw materials (including water), in-process materials, and finished products. (TR 67) (TR 69)
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Change Control
A formal program that describes evaluation and actions to be taken if a change is proposed or completed to facilities, materials, equipment, and/or processes used in the fabrication, packaging, and testing of drugs, or a proposed or completed change that may affect the operation of the quality or support systems. (TR22) (TR39) (TR52) (TR58) (TR64) (TR 70)
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Contact Time
The minimum amount of time that a sanitizer, disinfectant, or sporicide must be left in complete (wet) contact with the surface to be treated in order to be effective. (TR70)
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Coverage
The appropriate distribution of a chemical agent needed on the equipment surface to be effective. (TR70)
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Depyrogenation
The destruction and/or removal of bacterial endotoxins. A depyrogenation process should demonstrate at least 99.9% or a 3-log endotoxin reduction. (TR3) Removal or destruction of pyrogens. (TR70)
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Disinfectant
A chemical or physical agent that reduces, destroys, or eliminates vegetative forms of harmful microorganisms but not spores. (TR70)
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Disinfection
The destruction of pathogenic and other kinds of microorganisms by thermal or chemical means. (TR51) (TR70) Process of eliminating nearly all recognized pathogenic microorganisms but not necessarily all microbial forms (e.g., bacterial spores) on inanimate objects. (TR69) The chemical or physical inactivation of a bioburden on inanimate surfaces. Typically this requires a minimum three-log (3-log) reduction of vegetative microorganisms and two-log (2-log) reduction for bacterial spore be achieved in validation. (TR13)
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Environmental Monitoring (EM)
Describes the processes and activities that need to take place to characterize and monitor the quality of the environment. (TR70) Monitoring for nonviable particulates and/or microorganisms where the result meets or exceeds the alert and/or action level or limit. (TR88)
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First Air
Refers to the air exiting at the face of HEPA filters. Based on the airflow through HEPA filters and its unidirectional air flow the air exiting at the filter face is for the purposed of aseptic processing free of particulate contamination (both viable and non-viable). (TR70)
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Gamma Irradiation
The process by which a material is rendered sterile by exposing the material to a radioactive source, such as Cobalt 60. (TR70) Ionizing radiation that can be used to sterilize a material. (TR26)
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In-Use Testing (also called In-Situ Testing)
A field study that validates the effectiveness of a disinfecting agent, the trained operators, and the approved operating procedures. (TR70)
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Largest Daily Dose
Maximum daily dose of the next product to be produced in the equipment train. (TR70)
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Log Reduction
Log reduction is defined as the first log being 90%, the second log being 9% and the third log being 0.09% of the original inoculums. (TR70)
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Penicylinder
A small, ceramic carrier surface used to hold cultures of microorganisms. Used in antimicrobial effectiveness testing procedures. (TR70)
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Sanitizer
A compound that will reduce the number of vegetative microorganisms to a safe level as determined by public health requirements. Normally a reduction of 103 in vegetative microorganisms is obtained. (TR70)
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Sporicide
A compound that destroys all vegetative microorganisms and bacterial and fungal spores. (TR70)
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Sterile
Absence of life; usually refers to absence of viable microorganisms. Note: In practice, no such absolute statement regarding the absence of microorganisms can be proven. (TR22) (TR62) The absence of viable microorganisms. (TR44) (TR70)
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Transfer Disinfection
A disinfection process conducted on materials and equipment that coats the surface for a validated wetted time to remove bioburden prior to introducing such items into classified areas. (TR70)
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Validation
A documented program that provides a high level of scientific assurance that a manufacturing process will reliably produce acceptable product. The proof of validation is obtained through rational experimental design and the evaluation of data, preferably beginning from the process development phase and continuing through the commercial production phase. (TR01) A documented program that provides a high degree of assurance that a specific process, method, or system will consistently produce a result meeting predetermined acceptance criteria. (TR26) (TR57) (TR70) (TR74) Documented testing, performed under highly controlled conditions, which demonstrates that a process consistently produces a result that meets predetermined acceptance a result that meets predetermined acceptance criteria. Used to test processes, methods, and systems for which conditions can be controlled in the real world (i.e., after completion of testing, when the process is in use). Transportation processes can be qualified but not validated; in the real world, it is not possible to exert control over all parameters that could affect the transportation process (e.g., weather, customs, traffic delays, mechanical failures, etc.). (TR58) A documented program that provides a high de­gree of assurance that a specific process, method, or system will consistently produce a result meeting predetermined acceptance criteria. (Note: Vali­dation is a lifecycle program which may include development and qualification activities for one or more elements/systems that form a process.) (TR54-5) A documented program that provides a high degree of assurance that a specific process, method, or system will consistently produce a result meeting pre-determined acceptance criteria (17). (TR60-3)
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Visually Clean
Absence of materials that would adulterate a product when inspected with the eyes. (TR70)
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