Device-Level Biocompatibility
Biocompatibility is evaluated at the completed device level, accounting for all materials, manufacturing processes, assemblies, and final design. While material choice is critical, true biocompatibility reflects how the finished device interacts with the body under intended use conditions.
For medical cables and leads, jacket materials must prevent adverse biological responses such as cytotoxicity, irritation, sensitization, or systemic toxicity.
Material selection is driven by:
- Contact type (skin, mucosal membrane, blood, tissue, bone)
- Contact duration
- Limited: <24 hours
- Prolonged: 24 hours–30 days
- Permanent: >30 days
Each combination carries different biological risks and testing expectations. Early material decisions significantly affect qualification timelines and regulatory outcomes.
Biocompatibility Standards
Formal guidance began with the 1986 Tripartite Biocompatibility Guidance and evolved into today’s ISO 10993-1. Modern practice—reflected in ISO 10993-1 and FDA guidance—uses a risk-based biological evaluation approach, categorizing devices by contact type and duration to determine appropriate testing.
Rather than acting as a checklist, ISO 10993-1 emphasizes professional judgment and device context. Current regulatory strategies increasingly integrate:
- Biological testing
- Chemical characterization
- Extractables/leachables analysis
- Toxicological risk assessment
This approach improves confidence in material safety while minimizing unnecessary testing.
ISO 10993-1 provides guidance on:
- Cytotoxicity, irritation, and sensitization
- Systemic toxicity and hemocompatibility
- Genotoxicity, carcinogenicity, and reproductive toxicity
- Local effects after implantation
- Material degradation
- Sterilization residuals (e.g., EtO)
- Sample preparation and reference materials
Beyond Biocompatibility: Sterilization Compatibility
Sterilization effects must be considered early in design and verified through prototyping and qualification. Jacket materials must retain mechanical, electrical, and visual integrity after exposure.
Common sterilization methods include:
- Gamma, e-beam, and X-ray radiation
- Ethylene oxide (EtO)
- Steam autoclave
- Hydrogen peroxide vapor or plasma
Radiation
Radiation can cause polymer chain scission or cross-linking, leading to embrittlement, softening, or discoloration. Material response depends on polymer chemistry, crystallinity, wall thickness, additives, and packaging configuration. Polyacetal, polypropylene, and PTFE are particularly susceptible, though stabilizers can mitigate effects in some materials.
Ethylene Oxide (EtO)
EtO is widely used for temperature-sensitive devices but introduces variables such as humidity, pressure, and exposure time. Post-sterilization aeration to remove residual EO often limits material choices, as some polymers retain EO longer than others.
Steam Autoclave
High temperature and moisture can deform or degrade heat-sensitive materials. Poor seals may allow steam ingress, exposing conductors and promoting corrosion – sometimes resulting in delayed field failures.
Hydrogen Peroxide
Vapor or plasma peroxide systems offer short cycles and avoid high heat and humidity. With no extended aeration phase and reduced material stress, these methods are well suited for sensitive polymers and corrosion-prone metals.
Conclusion
Biocompatibility requirements depend on device classification (surface, externally communicating, or implantable) and contact duration. Successful designs balance biological safety with sterilization compatibility and long-term performance.
New England Wire Technologies brings decades of experience evaluating jacket materials for cytotoxicity, irritation, and sensitization. Our engineers support material selection across thermoplastics, thermosets, coatings, and sterilization methods—helping customers avoid over-specification, reduce qualification risk, and accelerate time to market.
Contact us to discuss biocompatibility or sterilization considerations—we’re ready to help guide your design from concept through launch.




























