What is Biological Indicator?

A Biological Indicator (BI) is a standardized preparation of specific bacterial spores with a known, high resistance to a specific sterilization process. They are used to prove that a sterilization cycle successfully delivered the required lethality by placing them in the most difficult-to-sterilise locations (cold spots) within a load.

1. Types of Biological Indicators

Spore Strips

  • Filter paper inoculated with spores.
  • Usually packaged in glassine envelopes.

Spore Suspension

  • Liquid suspensions used to directly inoculate product surfaces, packaging, or liquids.
  • Useful where strips cannot fit.

Self-Contained Biological Indicators (SCBIs)

  • Combines spore carrier and crushable growth media in one vial.
  • Minimizes false positives by eliminating aseptic transfer steps.

Ampoules

  • Sealed glass vials containing spores and culture media.
  • Ideal for monitoring liquid loads.

Spore Discs

  • Made of borosilicate paper or stainless steel.

2. Microorganisms Used in Biological Indicators

2.1 Geobacillus stearothermophilus

  • Reason for Selection:
  • Exceptionally high resistance to moist heat.
  • Consistent inactivation kinetics.
  • Thermophilic (heat-loving), non-pathogenic, and highly resistant to moist heat.
  • Applications:
  • Steam sterilization (autoclaves, SIP).
  • Vaporized hydrogen peroxide (VH₂O₂).
  • Advantages:
  • Industry standard, widely available in strips, ampoules, and suspensions.
  • Offers predictable resistance levels (D-values 1.5–3.0 minutes at 121°C).

2.2 Bacillus subtilis

  • Resistance Profile:
  • Not suitable for standard steam sterilization (low resistance).
  • D-value at 121°C ≈ 0.5 minutes (compared to 1.5–3.0 minutes for G. stearothermophilus).
  • Applications:
  • Used in steam sterilization for heat-sensitive liquid loads.
  • Rationale:
  • Lower resistance allows gentler sterilization cycles.
  • Prevents product degradation while ensuring microbial kill.

3. Biological Indicators vs Sterilization Methods

Sterilization MethodBiological Indicator MicroorganismRationale for UseGuideline Reference
Steam (Moist Heat, Autoclave, SIP)Geobacillus stearothermophilusThermophilic spores highly resistant to moist heatISO 11138-3; USP <55>; FDA Aseptic Processing Guidance
Ethylene Oxide (EtO)Bacillus atrophaeus(formerly B. subtilis var. niger)Spores resistant to gaseous sterilizationISO 11138-2; USP <55>; EMA GMP Annex 1
Dry Heat (Depyrogenation, Hot Air Ovens)Bacillus atrophaeusResistant to dry heat conditionsISO 11138-4; USP <55>; WHO GMP
Vaporized Hydrogen Peroxide (VH₂O₂)Geobacillus stearothermophilusResistant to oxidative sterilizationISO 11138-1; FDA Guidance
Radiation (Gamma, E-beam)Bacillus pumilusSpores resistant to ionizing radiationISO 11138-5; USP <55>

4. Regulatory Guideline References

ISO 11138 Series

  • Sterilization of health care products — Biological indicators.

USP (United States Pharmacopeia)

  • USP <55>: Biological Indicators—Resistance Performance Tests.
  • USP <1035>: Biological Indicators for Sterilization.

Ph. Eur. (European Pharmacopoeia)

  • Chapter 5.1.2: Biological indicators and related microbial preparations used in sterile product manufacture.

EN 866 Series

  • Biological systems for testing sterilizers and sterilization processes.

ISO 14161 / EN ISO 14161

  • Guidance for selection, use, and interpretation of BI results.

ISO 18472

  • Sterilization of health care products — Biological and Chemical Indicators — Test Equipment.

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