In pharmaceutical cleanrooms, viable surface sampling is one of the most practical ways to validate whether your contamination control strategy is actually working during real operations—not just on paper. But there’s a persistent problem: surface sampling is interpretive and trend-based, and its reliability depends on data quality and consistency. In highly controlled environments where true contamination events are (by design) rare, technique-driven variability (pressure, contact time, surface interaction) can mask real signals, complicate investigations, and weaken confidence in long-term environmental monitoring (EM) trends—exactly as regulators emphasize the need to evaluate individual results and oversee near and long-term trends. Read More >



