Title: Good Manufacturing Practices and Enforcement Actions
1Good Manufacturing Practices and Enforcement
Actions
- Dr. Timothy J. Hahn
- November 4, 2004
2Introduction
- Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) ensure
quality, safety, and consistency - GMP is the law (Code of Federal Regulations)
- Laws are upheld and enforced by the FDA.
- Enforcement is facilitated by facility inspections
3Food and Cosmetic Act
- A drug is deemed adulterated if the methods
used in, or the facilities or controls used for,
its manufacture, processing, packaging, or
holding do not conform to or are not operated or
administered in conformity with current good
manufacturing practice to assure that such drug
meets the requirements of this Act as to safety
and has the identity and strength, and meets the
quality and purity characteristics, which it
purports or is represented to possess.
4Food and Cosmetic Act
- A drug is deemed adulterated if the methods
used in, or the facilities or controls used for,
its manufacture, processing, packaging, or
holding do not conform to or are not operated or
administered in conformity with current good
manufacturing practice to assure that such drug
meets the requirements of this Act as to safety
and has the identity and strength, and meets the
quality and purity characteristics, which it
purports or is represented to possess.
5Food and Cosmetic Act
- A drug is deemed adulterated if the methods
used in, or the facilities or controls used for,
its manufacture, processing, packaging, or
holding do not conform to or are not operated or
administered in conformity with current good
manufacturing practice to assure that such drug
meets the requirements of this Act as to safety
and has the identity and strength, and meets the
quality and purity characteristics, which it
purports or is represented to possess.
6What is cGMP?
- Compliance with regulations
7Code of Federal Regulations
- Title 21 Food and Drugs
- Chapter 1 Food Drug Administration,
Department of Health Human Services - Subchapter C Drugs General (contains Parts
200-299) - Part 211 Current good manufacturing practices
for finished pharmaceuticals - Subpart F Production and Process Controls
- Section 211.100 Written Procedures
deviations - Paragraph (b)
- Sub-paragraphs (2)
- Sub-sub paragraph (ii)
8Code of Federal Regulations21 CFR
- Part 211 Finished Pharmaceutical
- Part 600 Biological Products
- Part 820 Medical Devices
9What is the purpose of compliance?
- A manufacturer of a drug or biological product
must ensure that appropriate quality systems are
in place to provide assurance that products are
manufactured under a state of control to ensure
safety, identify, quality, strength, purity.
10General Language of CFR
- suitable
- adequate
- sufficient
- appropriate
- justified
- qualified
- Exceptions For example, Part 211 Subpart J
Records and Reports - Defines what but not necessarily how
11Example
- Staffing
- CFR 211.25(c)
- Training
- CFR 211.25(a)
12Staffing
- CFR 211.25(c) There shall be an adequate number
of qualified personnel to perform and supervise
the manufacture, processing, packing, or holding
of each drug product.
13Staffing
- CFR 211.25(c) There shall be an adequate number
of qualified personnel to perform and supervise
the manufacture, processing, packing, or holding
of each drug product.
14Training
- CFR 211.25 (a) Each person engaged in the
manufacture, processing, packing, or holding of a
drug product shall have education, training, and
experience, or any combination thereof, to enable
that person to perform the assigned functions.
Training shall be in the particular operations
that the employee performs and in current good
manufacturing practice as they relate to the
employee's functions. Training in current good
manufacturing practice shall be conducted by
qualified individuals on a continuing basis and
with sufficient frequency to assure that
employees remain familiar with CGMP requirements
applicable to them.
15Training
- CFR 211.25 (a) Each person engaged in the
manufacture, processing, packing, or holding of a
drug product shall have education, training, and
experience, or any combination thereof, to enable
that person to perform the assigned functions.
Training shall be in the particular operations
that the employee performs and in current good
manufacturing practice as they relate to the
employee's functions. Training in current good
manufacturing practice shall be conducted by
qualified individuals on a continuing basis and
with sufficient frequency to assure that
employees remain familiar with CGMP requirements
applicable to them.
16Staffing and Training
- Adequate Number
- Qualified for the Specific Task
- Education
- Training
- Experience
- or appropriate combination
- cGMP Training is sufficient
17Staffing for Operations
- Considerations for
- Shift (1st, 2nd 3rd or rotating shift, 12 on, 12
off) - Weekends, Holidays
- Vacation, sick days, personal days
- Turnover
- Routine, non-routine operations
- Options for
- Overtime
- Cross training
- Compensate with schedule modifications
18Staffing and Training
- Defined by the firm
- Must ensure processing is performed correctly
- Must be defendable during an inspection
- Must meet current GMP requirements
19Enforcement
- Administrative
- Inspections (Biennial, Pre-approval, for cause)
- Form FDA 483 Inspection Observations
- Warning Letters
- Delay, suspension, withdrawal of product
approvals - Judicial
- Injunctions
- Civil Seizures
- Criminal Prosecution
20Administrative Action
- Form 482 Notice of Inspection
- Issued to highest ranking responsible person
- Form 483 Inspectional Observations
- Citations of items deemed as non-compliant with
cGMP - FDA may take copies of documents with them as
evidence - Form 484 Receipt of Samples
- Allow FDA to take samples as evidence
- EIR Establishment Inspection Report
- Official FDA document that describes issues with
supporting evidence.
21Establishment Investigation ReportWhat is the
companys status?
- NAI no action indicated
- VAI voluntary action indicated
- Companys responses (explanation or corrective
actions) to Form 483 observations were acceptable - OAI official action indicated
- Regulatory sanctions will be recommended
- Warning Letter will be issued
- Response required within 15 working days
22Opportunities to Understand Inspectors Concerns
and Express Position
- During initial response to an item
- At daily close-out meeting
- At follow-up discussions
- At the close-out meeting to review the Form 483
observations - During submission of responses to 483
observation. - After issue of EIR letter
- After issue of Warning Letter
- During submission of response to the Warning
letter - During meetings with the Agency
23Response to a Warning Letter
- Correct the objectionable condition
- Commit to completion of a corrective action plan
- Short-term, procedural controls are recommended
prior to completion of the action plan - Potential Consequences
- Withdraw of product or license to distribute
(Ultimate FDA enforcement Action) - Proceed to Judicial Action
24Judicial Action
- Injunction
- Stop adulterate product from reaching the market
- Requires non-compliant conditions to be corrected
- Seizure
- Civil court action used to confiscate product
- FDA files a complaint in federal court
- U.S. Marshall confiscates the material (no
advance warning may be required) - Criminal Prosecution
25Consent Decree
- Defendants in an injunction proceeding my consent
to a Decree of Permanent Injunction - Negotiated settlement
- Fines
- Penalty charges
- Restrictions on product distribution
- Plan to correct objectionable condition
- Oversight and frequent reporting
26Schering-Plough Consent Decree
- Four New Jersey and Puerto Rico sites
- 500 Million Fine
- Additional payments and costs
- Suspended manufacture of products
- Expert consultant hired
- Yearly inspections for 3 years
27Current Good Manufacturing Practices
- Principles
- Quality cannot be tested into a product
- Products must be manufactured under controlled
conditions where quality is built into the
process. - GMP regulations are the minimum requirements
- Current is a moving target
- Take Home Message Stay current
28How to stay current with GMP?
- Read Warning Letters issued to other companies
(www.fda.gov) - Read FDA-issued Guidance Documents (www.fda.gov)
- Attend FDA/Industry seminars
- Through feedback from inspections
- Review internal control systems against the CFR
- Through internal audits
29Schering-Plough Consent Decree Historical View
of Events related to Testing
- Barr Laboratory Federal Court Case
- Schering-Plough 483 Citations
30Barr Laboratory
- Federal Court Case
- U.S. vs. Barr Laboratories
- Decided in February 1993
- Impacted the interpretation of GMP for
out-of-specification test results - Very visible case and decision!
31What is an OOS?
- Each release test has
- A testing protocol
- Method
- Number of samples tested
- Method of data analysis
- A release specification range.
- An OOS is an out-of-specification result for a
release test
32The U.S. Government Alleged
- Barr discarded failing results based on an
assumption of laboratory error - Barr discarded failing results based on
subsequent passing results on a retest - Barr discarded initial results after sampling
different parts of the batch and retesting
33The U.S. Government Alleged (contd)
- Barr rarely performed true root cause
investigations - Barr conducted some investigations but did not
document results - The absence of documentation limited an
evaluation of the merits of the investigation - Barr would release product by averaging passing
and non-passing (without an investigation)
34Highlights of Judges Ruling
- Laboratory investigation consists of more than a
retest - Must conduct a thorough investigation to identify
root cause - Document results
- Implement corrective action
- When no root cause is found
- Cannot conduct 2 retests and average 3 results
- Cannot use a resample and assume sampling or
preparation error.
35Highlights of Judges Ruling (contd)
- An OOS result can be
- Disregarded when laboratory error is documented
- Not disregarded when due to process error
- Additional retesting
- May be performed if scientifically justified
- May not be used to test a product into compliance
- A firm should have
- a procedure to govern the retesting program.
- a predetermined testing protocol prior to
performing a retest.
36Current Expectations
- Perform a root cause investigation
- Document investigations
- Implement corrective actions
- Rationale for retesting much be scientifically
justified - Do not average passing and failing results,
unless justified - Establish a procedure to govern retesting
37Schering-Plough 483 Citations
- Location
- Manati, Puerto Rico (PR)
- Manati, PR
- La Piedras, PR
- Manati, PR
- La Piedras, PR
- Manati, PR
- Form 483 Issue Date
- March 28, 2000
- December 14, 2000
- February 16, 2001
- February 16, 2001
- June 5, 2001
- June 16, 2001
Issues include insufficient process validation,
failure to follow procedures, insufficient root
cause investigations, insufficient corrective
actions, and inappropriate responses to
out-of-specification results
38Observations from December 14, 2000
- Uniformity of assay is not always
representative of the lot being tested. For
example, one of the units...tested for release
testing was replaced with another unit when the
analyst noticed it was not sealed properly. An
adequate investigation was not conducted and
what corrective and preventive actions should be
implemented.
39Observations from December 14, 2000
- The analytical laboratory is instructed in Doc
No. 145.188.01 in the event of an
Out-of-Specification test result for the
Uniformity of Spray Content that is attributed
to a possible clogged actuator, to clean
actuator with methanol and water. However, the
product insert provided instructsto clean the
actuator with cold water. The result of the
retest after the cleaning was within
specification and was reported as the final
result.
40Observations from March 28, 2000
- The procedure Retest/Resample for
out-of-specifications (OOS) or out-of-guidelines
(OOG) Results and Analytical Laboratories
Investigations do not define the step that the
analyst should perform when the re-injection of
samples do not confirm the original results. As
explained by laboratory management the decision
on what to do in these cases is made on a case to
case basis and according to the supervisor and
analyst judgment.
41Observations from March 28, 2000
- At least in four (OOS) laboratory investigations
the laboratory practice was to retest only the
individual (OOS) results, at least in duplicate,
in a run different from the original one. The
results obtained are averaged and added to the
original results as individual values.
42Observations from March 28, 2000
- Failure to always perform adequate analytical
laboratory investigations into the cause of
product out-of-specification (OOS) and atypical
results - no data to support conclusion
- firm failed to conduct a linearity test in
order to demonstrate that the equipment was
suitable at the specific range of the absorbances
obtained.
43Observations from Feb 16, 2001
- Your laboratory failure investigations are
inadequate in that you re-test without any
scientific justification until passing results
are obtained and/or fail to take corrective
actions to prevent recurrence of the possible
assigned cause. - Six specific examples cited.
- No evidence to support this conclusion
- No scientific justification
44Observations from June 5, 2001
- Your Out of Specification (OOS) laboratory
investigations system is inadequate in that - After your laboratory obtained an OOS value, they
performed the re-testing without justification
documented. - Your laboratory investigations fail to support
the conclusion and/or assignable cause, which
invalidated the original analytical data and
validated the data obtained during re-testing.
45Observations from June 5, 2001
- These investigations do not have analytical data
to demonstrate the validity of this assignable
cause. During the inspection, your laboratory
performed a study to prove this assignable cause
and they found that this assignable cause
previously used to invalidate data is not valid.
46Observations from June 13, 2001
- In the following three recent laboratory
investigations, you concluded that extraneous
peaks in sample chromatography were the result of
contaminated glassware. - failed to indicate why the glassware for all 10
samples was presumed to be contaminated while the
glassware for the standard preparations was not. - your conclusion was that the presence of the
extra peak was due to glassware contamination
introduced by new flasks, even though you
conducted a special testing of new glassware that
resulted in chromatography results with any
extraneous peaks.
47Current Good Manufacturing Practices
- Principles
- Quality cannot be tested into a product
- Products must be manufactured under controlled
conditions where quality is built into the
process. - GMP regulations are the minimum requirements
- Current is a moving target
- Take Home Message Stay current