ISO/TR 4234:2026
(Main)Non-active surgical implants — Implant coating — Best practices for coating system assessment
Non-active surgical implants — Implant coating — Best practices for coating system assessment
This document specifies a systematic approach for the development of an assessment plan for coating systems for potential use for implants. This document provides brief introductory guidance on the coating system and intended functions. This document describes the assessment process from the context of product design, manufacturing (including sterilization), product aging and clinical intended use. This assessment process is intended to help evaluate coating properties that are pertinent to the performance of the coated devices and uses relevant examples to illustrate the process. NOTE ISO 17327-1 defines a set of coating properties that can be pertinent for any specific coating. This document is intended to be a useful tool in the development of an assessment plan of coating systems and is meant to support communication, e.g. among coatings manufacturer, original equipment manufacturer and regulatory bodies (through direct interaction or master files). This document does not address the clinical safety and performance of the surgical implant for which the coating system is a part. This document also does not cover specific tests for coating systems, as it is intended to be a structure for determining important properties and tests that can be appropriate for any given coating system. NOTE ISO/TR 17327-2 provides several tables listing standards related to coatings including some known test methods.
Implants chirurgicaux non actifs — Revêtement de l'implant — Bonnes pratiques pour l'évaluation du système de revêtement
General Information
- Status
- Published
- Publication Date
- 10-Mar-2026
- Technical Committee
- ISO/TC 150 - Implants for surgery
- Drafting Committee
- ISO/TC 150/WG 12 - Implant coatings
- Current Stage
- 6060 - International Standard published
- Start Date
- 11-Mar-2026
- Due Date
- 17-Dec-2026
- Completion Date
- 11-Mar-2026
Overview
ISO/TR 4234:2026 - Non-active Surgical Implants - Implant Coating - Best Practices for Coating System Assessment provides a systematic framework for developing assessment plans for coating systems used in surgical implants. Published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), this technical report guides stakeholders-including coatings manufacturers, original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), and regulatory bodies-through the complexities of evaluating coating properties critical to the performance of coated medical devices. It addresses the process from initial product design through manufacturing (including sterilization), product aging, and intended clinical use, supporting robust risk assessment and effective communication throughout product development.
Key Topics
Systematic Assessment Framework: The document outlines a structured approach to create comprehensive assessment plans for implant coating systems. It highlights essential considerations at each stage, from design attributes to evaluation plans.
Coating System Guidance: ISO/TR 4234 introduces the concept of a coating system, detailing its key regions such as coating bulk, coating surface, substrate-coating interface, triple-phase boundary, and affected substrate.
Risk and Outcome Assessment: The standard emphasizes consideration of varied risks-including coating degradation, delamination, or unintended chemical interactions-across different coating regions. Outcome assessments encompass the therapeutic functions of coatings, such as surface protection, drug elution, wear reduction, or biological fixation.
Design and Performance Attributes: In-depth attention is paid to identifying the intended functions and pertinent properties (measurable characteristics) of coatings, factoring in the specific clinical environment. This ensures that coatings fulfill their required roles without adversely affecting device safety or efficacy.
Flexibility for Use Cases: The guidance recognizes that assessment requirements vary depending on factors such as substrate material, multi-layer coatings, intended function, and specific device types.
Applications
ISO/TR 4234:2026 is highly applicable to organizations involved in the design, development, manufacturing, and regulatory review of non-active surgical implants with specialized coatings. Practical examples in the document demonstrate:
- Drug-eluting Coatings for Vascular Devices: For devices like coronary stents, this guidance aids in planning assessments that address properties such as drug deliverability, coating integrity, and stability throughout the device’s lifespan.
- Orthopaedic Implants: The report illustrates assessment of plasma-sprayed titanium bone fixation coatings, encompassing attributes crucial for joint stability and integration with bone and soft tissue.
- Cross-functional Communication: The standard supports seamless knowledge transfer and risk communication among engineering, manufacturing, quality, and regulatory teams-streamlining the path to compliance and market approval.
While the standard does not specify clinical safety or detailed test methods, it provides a robust structure for identifying which tests are appropriate for any given coating system, referencing other ISO standards for further detail where required.
Related Standards
For comprehensive coating system assessment and regulatory compliance, reference to the following standards is recommended:
- ISO 14630: Non-active surgical implants - General requirements
- ISO 17327-1: Non-active surgical implants - Implant coating - Part 1: General requirements
- ISO/TR 17327-2: Non-active surgical implants - Implant coating - Part 2: Reference standards related to coatings (includes tables for known test methods)
- ISO 13179-1: Implants for surgery - Coatings on metallic surgical implants - Plasma-sprayed coatings derived from titanium or titanium-6 aluminium-4 vanadium alloy powders
- ISO 25539-4: Cardiovascular implants - Endovascular devices - Application for coated devices
- ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765: Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary
Following ISO/TR 4234:2026 enhances the reliability, process consistency, and regulatory readiness of medical implants with coated surfaces, supporting innovation and patient safety across the medical device sector.
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Frequently Asked Questions
ISO/TR 4234:2026 is a technical report published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). Its full title is "Non-active surgical implants — Implant coating — Best practices for coating system assessment". This standard covers: This document specifies a systematic approach for the development of an assessment plan for coating systems for potential use for implants. This document provides brief introductory guidance on the coating system and intended functions. This document describes the assessment process from the context of product design, manufacturing (including sterilization), product aging and clinical intended use. This assessment process is intended to help evaluate coating properties that are pertinent to the performance of the coated devices and uses relevant examples to illustrate the process. NOTE ISO 17327-1 defines a set of coating properties that can be pertinent for any specific coating. This document is intended to be a useful tool in the development of an assessment plan of coating systems and is meant to support communication, e.g. among coatings manufacturer, original equipment manufacturer and regulatory bodies (through direct interaction or master files). This document does not address the clinical safety and performance of the surgical implant for which the coating system is a part. This document also does not cover specific tests for coating systems, as it is intended to be a structure for determining important properties and tests that can be appropriate for any given coating system. NOTE ISO/TR 17327-2 provides several tables listing standards related to coatings including some known test methods.
This document specifies a systematic approach for the development of an assessment plan for coating systems for potential use for implants. This document provides brief introductory guidance on the coating system and intended functions. This document describes the assessment process from the context of product design, manufacturing (including sterilization), product aging and clinical intended use. This assessment process is intended to help evaluate coating properties that are pertinent to the performance of the coated devices and uses relevant examples to illustrate the process. NOTE ISO 17327-1 defines a set of coating properties that can be pertinent for any specific coating. This document is intended to be a useful tool in the development of an assessment plan of coating systems and is meant to support communication, e.g. among coatings manufacturer, original equipment manufacturer and regulatory bodies (through direct interaction or master files). This document does not address the clinical safety and performance of the surgical implant for which the coating system is a part. This document also does not cover specific tests for coating systems, as it is intended to be a structure for determining important properties and tests that can be appropriate for any given coating system. NOTE ISO/TR 17327-2 provides several tables listing standards related to coatings including some known test methods.
ISO/TR 4234:2026 is classified under the following ICS (International Classification for Standards) categories: 11.040.40 - Implants for surgery, prosthetics and orthotics. The ICS classification helps identify the subject area and facilitates finding related standards.
ISO/TR 4234:2026 is available in PDF format for immediate download after purchase. The document can be added to your cart and obtained through the secure checkout process. Digital delivery ensures instant access to the complete standard document.
Standards Content (Sample)
Technical
Report
ISO/TR 4234
First edition
Non-active surgical implants —
2026-03
Implant coating — Best practices
for coating system assessment
Implants chirurgicaux non actifs — Revêtement de l'implant —
Bonnes pratiques pour l'évaluation du système de revêtement
Reference number
© ISO 2026
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Published in Switzerland
ii
Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Normative references . 1
3 Terms and definitions . 1
4 Guidance for coating system assessment . 3
4.1 General .3
4.2 Foundational considerations .3
4.2.1 Coating system .3
4.2.2 Outcome assessment.5
4.3 Coating assessment guide . .5
4.3.1 General .5
4.3.2 Explanation of flowchart.6
Annex A (informative) Example flowcharts . 8
Bibliography .10
iii
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out through
ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical committee
has been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International organizations,
governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work. ISO collaborates closely
with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of electrotechnical standardization.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are described
in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular, the different approval criteria needed for the different types
of ISO document should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the editorial rules of the
ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2 (see www.iso.org/directives).
ISO draws attention to the possibility that the implementation of this document may involve the use of (a)
patent(s). ISO takes no position concerning the evidence, validity or applicability of any claimed patent
rights in respect thereof. As of the date of publication of this document, ISO had not received notice of (a)
patent(s) which may be required to implement this document. However, implementers are cautioned that
this may not represent the latest information, which may be obtained from the patent database available at
www.iso.org/patents. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation of the voluntary nature of standards, the meaning of ISO specific terms and expressions
related to conformity assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to the World Trade
Organization (WTO) principles in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT), see www.iso.org/iso/foreword.html.
This document was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 150, Implants for surgery.
Any feedback or questions on this document should be directed to the user’s national standards body. A
complete listing of these bodies can be found at www.iso.org/members.html.
iv
Introduction
Coatings for surgical implants are widely used in the medical device industry. These coatings are
sophisticated systems involving the coating, the coating interface and substrate(s) to the coating. Due
to this increasing complexity and variability of coating systems, tools for the consistent assessment of
their performance and suitability to their application (i.e. their service environment) are increasingly
necessary. Specifically, herein the assessment of coating systems is described from design, functional and
manufacturing perspectives.
As described in ISO 17327-1, an implant coating is a layer of material with any different property than
the natural surface of the substrate that it is intentionally added [upon] and it is designed to have specific
physical features such as dimension, phase and coverage as well as mechanical, physical, optical, electrical,
bonding and perhaps other properties such as elution. A coating also can have specific interactions with the
contacting tissues, that can lead to the tissue’s biological reactions to the coating and the tissue’s impact on
the coating.
A coating has multiple intended functions, such as allowing easier delivery, achieving optimal tissue
integration and supporting the proper functioning of the device. The functions of a coating are supported
by a coating’s characteristics and intended use conditions in the patient. This drives the coating evaluation
work into two areas:
a) coating characterization per design; and
b) functional evaluation in context of the finished products for the patients.
Although these two areas can overlap, e.g. lubricity of the lubricious coating where both the designer and
user see the same thing from the patient’s function perspective, these two perspectives can also diverge
significantly from a coating characteristic testing perspective.
A coating and the substrate upon which the coating is placed make up a system that is intimately connected
through the interface such that the coating can have an effect on the substrate and the substrate can have an
effect on the coating. Some coatings are multi-layered, and as such, they can have multiple coating-substrate
and coating-coating interfaces to consider. The substrate and intermediate surface can require pre-
treatment such as roughening and cleaning, the use of process and post coating finishing can be necessary.
Due to this complexity, it is possible that some unintended chemicals, physical structures or properties can
be present in the final product. Therefore, the process is not only considered for producing the coating but
can also impart characteristics to the coating. For this reason, both the pre- and post-coating processes are
evaluated when determining the necessary biological functions and safety of a coating system.
A coating is usually made with a validated manufacturing process, that can involve one or more steps or
technologies. It is common that multiple parties are involved in designing and manufacturing finished
devices for medical uses. All parties have to be aware of the intended use of the materials, components and
product that they produce. Blind use of materials, components and processes to make finished products
cannot only add risks to the quality control but also add burden to be compliant to regulations.
v
Technical Report ISO/TR 4234:2026(en)
Non-active surgical implants — Implant coating — Best
practices for coating system assessment
1 Scope
This document specifies a systematic approach for the development of an assessment plan for coating
systems for potential use for implants. This document provides brief introductory guidance on the coating
system and intended functions. This document describes the assessment process from the context of product
design, manufacturing (including sterilization), product aging and clinical intended use. This assessment
process is intended to help evaluate coating properties that are pertinent to the performance of the coated
devices and uses relevant examples to illustrate the process.
NOTE ISO 17327-1 defines a set of coating properties that can be pertinent for any specific coating.
This document is intended to be a useful tool in the development of an assessment plan of coating systems and
is meant to support communication, e.g. among coatings manufacturer, original equipment manufacturer
and regulatory bodies (through direct interaction or master files).
This document does not address the clinical safety and performance of the surgical implant for which the
coating system is a part.
This document also does not cover specific tests for coating systems, as it is intended to be a structure for
determining important properties and tests that can be appropriate for any given coating system.
NOTE ISO/TR 17327-2 provides several tables listing standards related to coatings including some known test
methods.
2 Normative references
The following documents are referred to in the text in such a way that some or all of their content constitutes
requirements of this document. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references,
the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 14630, Non-active surgical implants — General requirements
ISO 17327-1, Non-active surgical implants — Implant coating — Part 1: General requirements
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the terms and definitions given in ISO 14630, ISO 17327-1 and the
following apply.
ISO and IEC maintain terminology databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at https:// www .iso .org/ obp
— IEC Electropedia: available at https:// www .electropedia .org/
3.1
implant coating
surface coating (3.2) or surface modification (3.3)
Note 1 to entry: Implant coating is considered a constituent of an implant.
Note 2 to entry: A laminate, i.e. a composite material made of multiple layers of the same or different materials with
the same or different internal structures assembled sandwich-like and bonded by heat, pressure, welding, soldering
or adhesives, is not in itself considered an implant coating. But the exposed surface of the laminate can be an implant
coating.
Note 3 to entry: A covering is not considered an implant coating. For example, additional material (e.g. a graft) added
to a structure (e.g. a stent) specifically to bridge elements of the structure for the sole purpose of reducing the
permeability of the structure.
[SOURCE: ISO 17327-1:2018, 3.1]
3.2
surface coating
layer of material with any different property than the
...




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