Sterilization of heat-labile antibiotic solutions: Which method is most appropriate to sterilize an antibiotic solution without degrading the active drug?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Microfiltration through a 0.22 μm membrane

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Many antibiotics are heat-labile and lose potency when exposed to sterilizing temperatures. Pharmacy compounding and laboratory practice therefore rely on non-thermal sterilization methods.



Given Data / Assumptions:

  • The material is a solution of antibiotic that cannot be heated.
  • We need a method that removes microbes without altering the drug.
  • Membrane filtration can physically remove bacteria and many fungi.



Concept / Approach:
Microfiltration with sterile 0.22 μm membranes retains bacteria and most fungal cells while allowing small molecules (such as antibiotics) to pass. This yields a sterile filtrate without heat exposure. Heat methods (dry heat, autoclaving) risk drug degradation; desiccation and incineration are inapplicable.



Step-by-Step Solution:
Rule out thermal methods due to heat lability.Select membrane filtration as the validated, non-thermal sterilization for solutions.Choose ‘‘Microfiltration through a 0.22 μm membrane’’.



Verification / Alternative check:
Pharmacopeial standards (aseptic processing) specify sterilizing-grade filters (≤0.22 μm) for parenteral solutions when terminal sterilization is not feasible.



Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Dry heat/autoclaving degrade heat-sensitive drugs; desiccation does not sterilize; incineration destroys the product entirely.



Common Pitfalls:
Using 0.45 μm filters (not sterilizing-grade) or assuming filtration removes viruses/endotoxin; additional controls may be needed for those.



Final Answer:
Microfiltration through a 0.22 μm membrane.


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