MPN NA Issue 19

Page 10

JOINING TECHNOLOGIES

TROY OSTRENG, SENIOR PRODUCT MANAGER FOR CPC’S BIOPHARMACEUTICAL BUSINESS, ASSESSES THE ADVANTAGES OF ASEPTIC CONNECTORS COMPARED WITH TUBE WELDING IN SMALL VOLUME BIOPHARMA PROCESSING.

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istorically, tube welding has been the only option for biopharma system designers and processors to make closed sterile connections in small volumes using small-bore tubing. As the industry continues to evolve, we are seeing unprecedented demand for new therapies, efficiencies, and improved speedto-market. The drive to process optimization has led manufacturers to evaluate all steps in their workflows to determine whether they can make improvements. One such area is the use of aseptic connections to create closed sterile systems. Today, manufacturers can move away from the cumbersome tube welding process towards singleuse connectors which are quick and easy-to-use, require almost no space in a cleanroom and provide efficient, seamless, and sterile fluid transfer.

SPACE AND TIME Cleanroom space is extremely valuable; the ability to remove welding equipment in favor of single-use connectors is, therefore, attractive to those looking to optimize the space they have when compared with the expensive and time-consuming process of validating new space. Single-use connectors are ready to use and have been validated for material biocompatibility, extractables, sterility, and leakage (Figure 1). From a practical perspective, once validated, welders also need to be moved into position and the correct size tubing holder must be obtained and inserted. They must then be initialized, the tubing loaded, welded, and then cured — a process that can take an average of 4–7 minutes in total; multiply the setup time by hundreds of welds each week, operator time stacks up considerably. One hundred welds, for example, would require 6.67 hours of welding time at the lower end of the timescale at four minutes, whereas aseptic

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f o d n e e h T ? d l e the w connectors are presterilized and ready to go in a tubing/bag assembly and require mere seconds to connect and actuate. LENGTH AND MATERIAL Aseptic connectors can also be applied to any tubing length with no minimum requirement, and to any type of tubing, including silicone (Figure 2). Different types can also be connected; for example, silicone to C-Flex, and different hose barb sizes can be used at opposite sides of the connector. Genderless options eliminate the need to carry male/female components, and connectors of the same family can be interconnected. For welding, minimum tubing lengths are often required to fit into the welder, and only the same kinds of tubing materials can be fused together. In addition, welding cannot be used on silicone as the material burns during the process. Welders must also be set up for a specific tubing size and material, adding a further stage to the process. RISK OF CONTAMINATION Using aseptic connectors also reduces the risk of contamination as the margin for error is far narrower. For example, not following manufacturers’ recommendations in tube welding can lead to placing tubing with the incorrect diameter in the tube holder. This can cause small pinholes in the weld, due to pinching or squeezing the tubing out of the holder during the weld process. Welding different tubing types together — whether knowingly or unknowingly — can also lead to weld failure. With aseptic connectors there is little to no contamination risk because validated aseptic connectors maintain a sterile boundary between two adjoining single-use systems.

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