Cleanroom Series (Part 1)

0 comentarios

In our previous article, we introduced the shift from spot checks to continuous, in-operation monitoring in cleanrooms. Part 1 explains why spot checks fall short, what continuous monitoring solves, how to build an auditable monitoring loop, and the common pitfalls to avoid.

1) Why spot checks aren't enough — three blind spots

● Dynamic conditions

People flow, open-handling, and equipment switching create short particle spikes. Fixed-time spot checks miss transient events.

● Small samples, unstable stats

In high-grade areas, background counts are very low. Small sampling volumes cause high variance and flip-flop conclusions ("pass today, fail tomorrow").

● Broken evidence chain

 Audits and reviews expect a continuous record of "event → detection → action → review." Scattered reports cannot reconstruct the process.

2) What continuous (in-operation) monitoring delivers — three hard benefits

● Earlier detection

Minute-scale sampling shortens the time from event to alarm, shrinking the risk window.

● Better explainability

Time series and neighboring points let you reconstruct when/where/why, turning deviation investigations into evidence-based work.

● Audit-readiness

Trends, alarm handling, and change logs form a complete, auditable trail usable for batch release and annual reviews.

3) Why emphasize monitoring during operation?

● Most issues happen in operation, not in static conditions.

● Minute-scale sampling provides sufficient volume, improving detection probability of small sizes (e.g., 0.3–0.5 μm) and statistical confidence.

● Alarms trigger faster inside the event window—no more “incident passed, records missing.”

4) From spot-check reports to a monitoring loop

● Measure — Define channels, volume, and frequency; plan key points using the Room → Process → Risk method.

● Alert — Set alert/action limits from historical baselines; segment by condition/shift/season; apply hysteresis and delay to cut false alarms.

● Verify — Check instrument/probe/tubing first; then cross-check neighboring points, returns, access logs, and process logs.

● Investigate — Mark the event window (e.g., T−10 to T+30 min); hypothesize causes (open handling/leak/maintenance/switch-over) and validate.

● CAPA — Record root cause, temporary control, permanent fix, and recurrence monitoring; re-baseline limits or adjust points during monthly/quarterly reviews.

5) Frequent pitfalls (and better alternatives)

● Using classification limits as alarm limits → Build baselines (by condition/season) and overlay statistical limits within the compliance framework.

● Long tubing and too many elbows → Keep runs short/straight/few elbows; perform leak checks and flow calibration; use local sampling where possible.

● No re-validation after point changes → Maintain a point register with change triggers (relocation/additions/pump changes); perform re-validation to keep data comparable.

6) The "good-enough trio" for continuous monitoring

● Is the volume sufficient?

Small particles must be visible statistically.

● Are points representative?

Plan around Room → Process → Risk so the layout reflects real exposure.

● Is the data usable?

Baselined alarms, evidence-based investigations, and change logs make the record audit-read

Glossary (one-liners)

● NVP (non-viable particles) — Count-based airborne particles classified by size (not culturable).

● 0.3 / 0.5 μm — Common small-size channels; 0.3 μm for early trending, 0.5 μm for disposition.

● Sampling volume — Air volume per unit time; higher volume → higher statistical confidence.

● Grade A/B — EU GMP sterile core (A) and its background (B).

● Trend & alarms — Baseline-driven thresholds and time-series follow-up for early detection and fast response.

📋 One-page self-check

□ 1. Are in-operation areas continuously monitored?

□ 2. Do size channels cover 0.3/0.5 μm (risk-based)?

□ 3. Is the sampling volume sufficient for high-grade areas?

□ 4. Are baselines segmented by condition/season and reviewed?

□ 5. Are alert/action limits with hysteresis/delay configured?

□ 6. Can neighboring points, returns, access, and process logs be cross-checked?

□ 7. Is there a clear alarm handling SOP and escalation path?

□ 8. Are probe/tubing leak checks and flow calibration routine?

□ 9. Do point changes trigger re-validation and register updates?

□ 10. Do you run monthly/quarterly reviews to re-baseline and dynamically adjust limits based on data trends?

> Tip: If you answered “No” to 3 or more items, your compliance risk may be elevated.

🤝 About Temtop Continuous Monitoring Solutions

Shifting from "spot checks" to "continuous monitoring" is not just an equipment upgrade; it’s a management system transformation.

Temtop specializes in compliant particle monitoring solutions, assisting you with:

✅ Key point risk assessment & layout planning

✅ Historical baseline modeling & limit setting

✅ Audit trails & data integrity compliance

👉 If you encounter challenges during self-check or need the "Monitoring Loop Implementation Guide", please contact us.

🔗Temtop UK official website: https://www.temtop.co.uk/

📧Email: service@elitech.uk.com

Deja un comentario

Todos los comentarios del blog se revisan antes de publicarlos.
Hace [hora] minutos, desde [ubicación]
¡Te has suscripto satisfactoriamente!
Este correo electrónico ha sido registrado.
ico-collapse
0
visto recientemente
ic-cross-line-top
Arriba
ic-expand
ic-cross-line-top