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The US Food and Drug Administration has expanded its guidance on medical device sterilization to include vaporized hydrogen peroxide, according to an agency press release issued on January 8.

The update is intended to promote wider use of vaporized hydrogen peroxide (VHP) as a viable alternative to ethylene oxide (EtO). The FDA guidance on sterile devices has been revised to include VHP.

The acceptance of VHP as an Established Category A method of sterilization is another step toward the FDA’s larger goal of reducing EtO, according to the release.

Sterilization is essential for certain medical devices, but the use of EtO, currently the most common method, involves the release of emissions that are potentially harmful to health, and the FDA seeks to identify safe and effective alternatives to reduce risk to the environment and communities where device sterilization occurs. Current Established Category A sterilization methods include moist heat, dry heat, EtO, and radiation. 

Dr. Suzanne Schwartz, Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation, FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Silver Spring, Md.
FDA
Dr. Suzanne Schwartz

“Vaporized hydrogen peroxide’s addition as an established sterilization method helps us build a more resilient supply chain for sterilized devices that can help prevent medical device shortages,” Suzanne Schwartz, MD, director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in the press release. “As innovations in sterilization advance, the FDA will continue to seek additional modalities that deliver safe and effective sterilization methods that best protect public health,” she said.

The FDA has supported the development of EtO alternatives since 2019, and remains committed to reducing EtO emissions and also to avoiding potential device shortages, according to the release.

“Ethylene oxide is highly flammable and carcinogenic and poses exposure-related safety concerns for reprocessing staff, as well as environmental risks,” said Venkataraman R. Muthusamy, MD, AGAF, of the University of California, Los Angeles, in an interview. “These risks have led some states or regions to ban or limit its use, but despite these risks, it is currently the most commonly used sterilization technique for medical devices in the United States,” he said. Therefore, coming up with alternatives has been a high priority for the FDA, he added.

VHP has several advantages over EtO, Dr. Muthusamy said. VHP breaks down safely into water and oxygen, with low residual levels after exposure, and has no known oxidation or discoloration effects. In addition, VHP has a low temperature, and should theoretically be safe to use with endoscopes, although data are lacking, he said.

Dr. Muthusamy said that he was not yet too familiar with VHP as a technique, in part because most accessories in GI are single-use.

Primary issues to expanding the use of vaporized hydrogen peroxide as a sterilizing agent in GI clinical practice include availability and the cost of acquiring the devices needed, Dr. Muthusamy told GI & Hepatology News. “Also, the comparative efficacy of this technique in sterilizing GI endoscopes to ethylene oxide and the impact of VHP on scope durability and performance will need to be assessed, and the impact of VHP on the health and safety of reprocessing staff will need to be assessed and monitored,” he said.

There is an interest in the GI community in “green” endoscopy and reducing waste, Dr. Muthusamy said. If an inexpensive, safe, and cost-effective option for sterilization of other devices beyond endoscopes exists, “perhaps we could reduce our use of some disposables as well,” he said.

Dr. Muthusamy had no financial conflicts to disclose. 

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The US Food and Drug Administration has expanded its guidance on medical device sterilization to include vaporized hydrogen peroxide, according to an agency press release issued on January 8.

The update is intended to promote wider use of vaporized hydrogen peroxide (VHP) as a viable alternative to ethylene oxide (EtO). The FDA guidance on sterile devices has been revised to include VHP.

The acceptance of VHP as an Established Category A method of sterilization is another step toward the FDA’s larger goal of reducing EtO, according to the release.

Sterilization is essential for certain medical devices, but the use of EtO, currently the most common method, involves the release of emissions that are potentially harmful to health, and the FDA seeks to identify safe and effective alternatives to reduce risk to the environment and communities where device sterilization occurs. Current Established Category A sterilization methods include moist heat, dry heat, EtO, and radiation. 

Dr. Suzanne Schwartz, Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation, FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Silver Spring, Md.
FDA
Dr. Suzanne Schwartz

“Vaporized hydrogen peroxide’s addition as an established sterilization method helps us build a more resilient supply chain for sterilized devices that can help prevent medical device shortages,” Suzanne Schwartz, MD, director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in the press release. “As innovations in sterilization advance, the FDA will continue to seek additional modalities that deliver safe and effective sterilization methods that best protect public health,” she said.

The FDA has supported the development of EtO alternatives since 2019, and remains committed to reducing EtO emissions and also to avoiding potential device shortages, according to the release.

“Ethylene oxide is highly flammable and carcinogenic and poses exposure-related safety concerns for reprocessing staff, as well as environmental risks,” said Venkataraman R. Muthusamy, MD, AGAF, of the University of California, Los Angeles, in an interview. “These risks have led some states or regions to ban or limit its use, but despite these risks, it is currently the most commonly used sterilization technique for medical devices in the United States,” he said. Therefore, coming up with alternatives has been a high priority for the FDA, he added.

VHP has several advantages over EtO, Dr. Muthusamy said. VHP breaks down safely into water and oxygen, with low residual levels after exposure, and has no known oxidation or discoloration effects. In addition, VHP has a low temperature, and should theoretically be safe to use with endoscopes, although data are lacking, he said.

Dr. Muthusamy said that he was not yet too familiar with VHP as a technique, in part because most accessories in GI are single-use.

Primary issues to expanding the use of vaporized hydrogen peroxide as a sterilizing agent in GI clinical practice include availability and the cost of acquiring the devices needed, Dr. Muthusamy told GI & Hepatology News. “Also, the comparative efficacy of this technique in sterilizing GI endoscopes to ethylene oxide and the impact of VHP on scope durability and performance will need to be assessed, and the impact of VHP on the health and safety of reprocessing staff will need to be assessed and monitored,” he said.

There is an interest in the GI community in “green” endoscopy and reducing waste, Dr. Muthusamy said. If an inexpensive, safe, and cost-effective option for sterilization of other devices beyond endoscopes exists, “perhaps we could reduce our use of some disposables as well,” he said.

Dr. Muthusamy had no financial conflicts to disclose. 

The US Food and Drug Administration has expanded its guidance on medical device sterilization to include vaporized hydrogen peroxide, according to an agency press release issued on January 8.

The update is intended to promote wider use of vaporized hydrogen peroxide (VHP) as a viable alternative to ethylene oxide (EtO). The FDA guidance on sterile devices has been revised to include VHP.

The acceptance of VHP as an Established Category A method of sterilization is another step toward the FDA’s larger goal of reducing EtO, according to the release.

Sterilization is essential for certain medical devices, but the use of EtO, currently the most common method, involves the release of emissions that are potentially harmful to health, and the FDA seeks to identify safe and effective alternatives to reduce risk to the environment and communities where device sterilization occurs. Current Established Category A sterilization methods include moist heat, dry heat, EtO, and radiation. 

Dr. Suzanne Schwartz, Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation, FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Silver Spring, Md.
FDA
Dr. Suzanne Schwartz

“Vaporized hydrogen peroxide’s addition as an established sterilization method helps us build a more resilient supply chain for sterilized devices that can help prevent medical device shortages,” Suzanne Schwartz, MD, director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in the press release. “As innovations in sterilization advance, the FDA will continue to seek additional modalities that deliver safe and effective sterilization methods that best protect public health,” she said.

The FDA has supported the development of EtO alternatives since 2019, and remains committed to reducing EtO emissions and also to avoiding potential device shortages, according to the release.

“Ethylene oxide is highly flammable and carcinogenic and poses exposure-related safety concerns for reprocessing staff, as well as environmental risks,” said Venkataraman R. Muthusamy, MD, AGAF, of the University of California, Los Angeles, in an interview. “These risks have led some states or regions to ban or limit its use, but despite these risks, it is currently the most commonly used sterilization technique for medical devices in the United States,” he said. Therefore, coming up with alternatives has been a high priority for the FDA, he added.

VHP has several advantages over EtO, Dr. Muthusamy said. VHP breaks down safely into water and oxygen, with low residual levels after exposure, and has no known oxidation or discoloration effects. In addition, VHP has a low temperature, and should theoretically be safe to use with endoscopes, although data are lacking, he said.

Dr. Muthusamy said that he was not yet too familiar with VHP as a technique, in part because most accessories in GI are single-use.

Primary issues to expanding the use of vaporized hydrogen peroxide as a sterilizing agent in GI clinical practice include availability and the cost of acquiring the devices needed, Dr. Muthusamy told GI & Hepatology News. “Also, the comparative efficacy of this technique in sterilizing GI endoscopes to ethylene oxide and the impact of VHP on scope durability and performance will need to be assessed, and the impact of VHP on the health and safety of reprocessing staff will need to be assessed and monitored,” he said.

There is an interest in the GI community in “green” endoscopy and reducing waste, Dr. Muthusamy said. If an inexpensive, safe, and cost-effective option for sterilization of other devices beyond endoscopes exists, “perhaps we could reduce our use of some disposables as well,” he said.

Dr. Muthusamy had no financial conflicts to disclose. 

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