Patent Description:
In order for liquid containers for medical applications to be suitable for a safe use in treatment of patients, as humans and animals, such containers are often used only once and subjected to a sterilisation treatment. Polymer materials and especially polyethylene are thereby easy to process in a so called blow-fill-seal process, where the liquid container is formed especially for example by blow moulding, filled with a liquid and sealed. Polyethylene can further be recycled, so that it is often used for such kind of application. The sterilisation treatment is thereby directed at reducing the quantity of micro-organisms present in or on an object in such way as to reduce any associated risk to the health of the patient that undergoes a treatment involving such containers.

Liquid containers for medical applications that may undergo sterilisation treatments are for example described in <CIT>. <CIT> describes containers made from polyethylene compositions comprising <NUM>-<NUM> wt% linear low-density polyethylene having a density of <NUM>-<NUM>/m<NUM> and <NUM>-<NUM> wt% of a linear low-density polyethylene having a density of <NUM>-<NUM>/m<NUM>. Such containers are subjected to sterilisation at <NUM>. No indication is presented as to the period of sterilisation. A disadvantage of such containers is that they comprise linear low-density polyethylene materials which, by nature of their production process, contain residues originating from catalysts. Such residues may for example include tetrahydrofuran, chromium, zirconium and/or hafnium. Because of the presence of such restudies, these materials are not suitable for certain medical applications.

On the other hand, <CIT> describes the use of linear low-density polyethylenes prepared using a zirconium-metallocene catalyst, in which the linear low-density polyethylene has a density of <NUM>/m<NUM>, from which pouches are made that are subjected to sterilisation at <NUM> for <NUM> minutes. Also for these containers, a disadvantage is that they comprise linear low-density polyethylene materials which again contains residues from the catalyst.

<CIT> discloses LDPE suitable for sterilisable bottles and containers. <CIT> discloses a tubular polymerisation reactor for production of LDPE.

In view of increasingly stringent expectations, requirements and regulations relating to materials to be used in medical applications to safeguard patients' health and safety, such residues become more and more undesirable.

Therefore, it is clear that there is an ongoing need to find new materials suitable for liquid containers sterilisable at high temperatures and fulfilling the demanding expectations for such materials.

This has now been achieved according to the present invention by the use of a polyethylene material for liquid containers sterilisable at a temperature of ≥ <NUM> during a period of ≥ <NUM> minutes,.

The use according to the present invention is preferably for example for disposable liquid containers, that may thus used only once. The use according to the present invention moreover is preferably for example for aseptic packaging.

Such density may for example contribute to a good shape stability during sterilisation. Shape stability can be understood to be the retention of the original shape of liquid container or filled liquid container during sterilisation. A liquid container that has good shape stability may for example not show thermal deformation or durable thermal deformation during sterilisation. A liquid container that has good shape stability during sterilisation may thus for example preferably not demonstrate changes in shape, especially durable changes in shape, such as for example the formation of bumps, ripples, dents and/or bulges and/or sagging and/or changes of volume. Durable may thereby mean that persists and/or remains visible after sterilisation. A liquid container that has good shape stability may for example preferably also not leak during sterilisation. A good shape stability during sterilisation thereby becomes increasingly important not only for aesthetic reasons but also because it strongly fosters the medical personnel's confidence and the ability to subject the liquid container to proper sterilisation as well as well as the trust in a quality treatment.

Such melt mass flow rate may for example result in a material having good processability in blow-fill-seal production processes. Such melt mass flow rate may for example contribute to a good processability and/or a good melt stability in the parison blow moulding stage in the blow-fill-seal production process. Furthermore, it may also contribute to a good shape stability during sterilisation.

In the context of the present invention, liquid containers may for example be bottles, vials, ampoules, tubes, bags or pouches. For example, the liquid containers may be flexible containers, such as flexible intravenous bag or flexible intravenous bottles, preferably a (pre)filled with a liquid. The liquid container can thereby for example contain for example liquids, solutions and/or suspensions of medical materials used for medical treatment of patients, including for example intravenous treatments. The liquid containers may furthermore for example have a volume of ≥ <NUM> I, alternatively ≥ <NUM> I, alternatively ≥ <NUM> I, alternatively ≥ <NUM> I. Such liquid containers may for example have a volume of ≤ <NUM> I, alternatively ≤ <NUM> I, alternatively ≤ <NUM> I, alternatively ≤ <NUM> I. For example, such liquid containers may have a volume of ≥ <NUM> I and ≤ <NUM> I, alternatively ≥ <NUM> I and ≤ <NUM> I.

Liquid containers according to the present invention may for example be sterilisable via a heat treatment. For example, this heat treatment may especially take place in the presence of steam and/or under pressure, especially in an autoclave. For example, such pressure may be between <NUM> bar and <NUM> bar, preferably between <NUM> bar and <NUM> bar, further preferred ≤ <NUM> bar. The duration of the sterilisation process may for example be ≥ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM>. The liquid containers according to the present invention may for example be sterilisable at temperatures of ≥ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM>, preferably between <NUM> and <NUM>, even more preferred at <NUM>.

At such high temperatures and especially for examples for duration of ≥ <NUM> shape stability becomes increasingly difficult to maintain. The materials used according to the present invention have thereby surprisingly show very good shape stability even for sterilisation at relatively high temperatures and/or for long durations.

In an embodiment, a liquid container may be for example pre-filled. In the context of the present invention, pre-filled is to be understood to be filled upon or right after production of the liquid container and/or prior to being subjected to a sterilisation process. A pre-filled liquid container may for example be produced by filling the liquid container as part of its production process or right thereafter, especially for example in a so-called 'blow-fill-seal'-process (BFS-process). In such a BFS-process liquid containers may be produced by an extrusion blow moulding process, in which directly upon moulding of the liquid container or right thereafter, it is filled with a liquid material and sealed. Alternatively, liquid containers may be also produced by extrusion blow moulding and filled at a later stage.

The polyethylene material used according to the present invention may for example be a polyethylene material comprising ≥ <NUM> mol-%, alternatively ≥ <NUM> mol-%, alternatively ≥ <NUM> mol-%, alternatively ≥ <NUM> mol-%, alternatively ≥ <NUM> mol-%, of structural units in the polymer chains deriving from ethylene monomers. It may also preferably for example not comprise catalyst/metal residues, such as especially metallocene residues, and/or any LLDPE.

The polyethylene material used according to the present invention may preferably for example be produced in a high-pressure free-radical polymerisation process. The polyethylene material may for example be produced in a tubular reactor. The polyethylene may for example be produced in a polymerisation process operated at a pressure of ≥ <NUM> bar, alternatively ≥ <NUM> bar, alternatively ≥ <NUM> bar, alternatively ≥ <NUM> bar, alternatively ≥ <NUM> bar. The polyethylene material may for example be produced in the presence of a free-radical initiator and/or without using a catalyst and/or without using any metal containing compound. The production method thereby for example influences the structure, crystallinity and/or molecular weight distribution of the polyethylene material and thereby contributes both to a good processability and a very good shape stability during sterilisation.

In the production of polyethylenes via free-radical high-pressure polymerisation processes, catalysts comprising tetrahydrofuran, chromium, hafnium and/or zirconium are not used. Accordingly, no residues of such deriving from catalysts used in the polymerisation process remain in polyethylenes produced via such process.

The use according to the present invention may be for liquid containers that can for example comprise multiple layers. Alternatively, use according to the present invention may be for liquid containers that preferably consist of a single layer.

The use according to the present invention may be for liquid container produced via a process comprising the steps of:.

wherein the liquid container may be subjected to a sterilisation treatment at a temperature of ≥ <NUM> during a period of ≥ <NUM> minutes.

Said melt may thereby be provided by subjecting the polyethylene material to a melt extrusion process. Said parison may be produced for example by feeding the molten material from the melt extrusion process into a mold having the shape of the parison. The pressurised gas may be a sterilized and/or medical grade gas.

The use according to the present invention may be for liquid container with a wall thickness of ≤ <NUM>, alternatively ≤ <NUM>, alternatively ≤ <NUM>. For example, such layer may have a thickness of ≥ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM>. For example, such layer may have a thickness of ≥ <NUM> and ≤ <NUM>, alternatively ≥ <NUM> and ≤ <NUM>.

The use according to the present invention may be for liquid container produced via a process in which the sealing step f) is performed by.

Liquid containerswere prepared in the same way for example I and II on a Rommelag Bottlepack <NUM> Blow-Fill-Seal machine. The only difference thus being in the material used.

Example I was performed according to the invention; example II was performed using a polyethylene material for comparative purposes.

PE-A was a polyethylene of the grade SABIC® LDPE PCG06 obtainable from SABIC, produced in a tubular high-pressure free-radical polymerisation process at a pressure of <NUM> bar; PE-B was a polyethylene of the grade PE3020D obtainable from LyondellBasell.

The density was determined in accordance with ISO <NUM>-<NUM> (<NUM>), relating to methods for the determination of density of non-cellular plastics, using method A.

The melt mass flow rate was determined in accordance with ISO <NUM>-<NUM> (<NUM>), relating to the determination of the melt mass-flow rate and the melt volume-flow rate of thermoplastics, at a temperature of <NUM> and a load of <NUM>.

Shape stability on sterilisation is determined by subjecting liquid containers obtained from examples I and II to a sterilisation treatment with steam in an autoclave at a temperature of <NUM> for <NUM> minutes. After that sterilisation treatment shape stability during sterilisation has been assessed visually.

Claim 1:
Use of a polyethylene material for liquid containers that are sterilisable at a temperature of ≥ <NUM> during a period of ≥ <NUM> minutes,
wherein the polyethylene material has a density ≥ <NUM> and ≤ <NUM>/m<NUM> as determined according to ISO <NUM>-<NUM> (<NUM>), method A, and a melt mass-flow rate of ≥<NUM> and ≤<NUM>/<NUM> as determined according to ISO <NUM>-<NUM> (<NUM>) at a temperature of <NUM> and a load of <NUM>;
wherein the polyethylene material is produced in a high-pressure free-radical polymerisation process at a pressure of ≥ <NUM> bar.