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Safety Factors for Ethylene Oxide Sterilization: Patient, Worker, and Environment

The common medical device sterilization method requires optimization, particularly with potential regulatory changes on the horizon. Emissions limits could become more stringent by as much as 90% per one technical affairs VP.

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Ethylene oxide sterilization is a commonly used method for sterilizing medical devices. The method has made headlines for concerns over environmental effects, and while the FDA has encouraged industry to develop new approaches, a singular, comparable alternative sterilization method has not yet emerged.

“The FDA is closely monitoring the supply chain effects of closures and potential closures of certain facilities that use ethylene oxide to sterilize medical devices prior to their use. The Agency is concerned about the future availability of sterile medical devices and the potential for medical device shortages that might impact patient care.” -FDA.gov Ethylene Oxide Sterilization Facility Updates

Clark Houghtling, vice president of business development & technical affairs for Cosmed Group, Inc. spoke at the virtual Medical Packaging Conference about why the method is so versatile, and what practices factor into worker, patient, and environmental safety when using the process.

Ethylene oxide basics

Ethylene oxide (also referred to as “EtO” or “EO”) is a simple chemical compound, C₂H₄O. “It was discovered in 1859, so we've known about ethylene oxide for a very long time. In the late 1950s, a gentlemen named McDonald patented a process for processing medical devices with ethylene oxide,” explained Houghtling.

It’s currently the most widely used method for industrial medical device sterilization covering about 52% of the market, due in no small part to the fact that it can be used for almost all medical devices without deleterious effects. Exceptions include non-vented packaging because EtO is a gas that must be vented, and liquids (as gas will not pass through a liquid).

EtO is highly effective against microbes—bacteria, viruses, yeast, or molds—and diffusive. “It can even go through some plastics that are sealed airtight,” he said. “It's compatible with a very wide variety of devices and packaging materials. Another important advantage that can be overlooked is that devices can be re-sterilized with ethylene oxide, which can’t be done with some other sterilization methods, such as gamma irradiation, electron beam, x-ray, or high-temperature steam.”


Watch video   

Watch this video on bold innovations in med device sterility assurance.


EtO has four variables that can be altered to produce a desired result—temperature, humidity, gas concentration, and gas exposure time—which offers more customization than sterilization methods that offer a single variable (the delivered dose).

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