Title: VALIDATION OF COMPUTERISED SYSTEMS IN THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
1VALIDATION OF COMPUTERISED SYSTEMSIN THE
PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
- Matt Safi
- Product manager
2What does need validation?
- Any drugs manufactured for use by humans and
animals needs to be validated. - A satisfactory inspection and approval by a
regulatory inspector is required before a drug is
released for sale.
3What is validated?
- The Process of manufacturing a drug
4What is Process Validation?
- Validation is documented evidence that provides
a high degree of assurance that a specific
process will consistently produce a product
meeting its predetermined specifications and
quality attributes -
FDA
5Documentary evidence?
- If aint written, it aint done
- Sam Clarke (FDA inspector), 1993
6Principles of validation
- Document what is to be done
- Document how it is to be done
- Do it
- Produce documented evidence that it was done in
accordance with the how - Demonstrate that it remains in a state of control
7Who is responsible for validation?
- The manufacturer of a drug is responsible
- for getting the process validated
8What is FDA validation?
- FDA (Food Drug Administration) is responsible
for granting approval for drugs intended for the
use by humans and animals within the US.
9Does every drug need FDA validation?
- No, only drugs which are intended for use within
USA. - Generally every country has its own regulatory
body - MCA (Medicines Control Agency) regulatory body
in the UK. - FDA has the most stringent requirement
10Can a Computerised system claimed to be FDA
validated?
- No. Only the process can be validated.
- If a system has been used in a validated process
then it will help the validation process
11Regulators requirements
- Computerised systems installed in pharmaceutical
companies are fit for their intended purposes (in
the context of relevant GMPs) by considering - Quality assurance of the development life-cycle
- Performance validation
- In-use controls
- Accuracy and reliability
12Pharmaceutical Company Requirements
- Computerised systems requirements
- Quality assured, robust, reliable system
delivered on time within budget - Meet functional and business targets
- Acceptable to regulatory agencies
- Ease of maintenance
13Cost of poor quality
- Denial of product approval
- Increased regulatory scrutiny
- Seizure of product
- Increased cost of implementation and maintenance
14What is our responsibility?
- Ensure that the supplied automation system
satisfies the requirement specification - Provide documentary evidence.
- Documentary evidence will be integrated with the
overall documentation for submission to the
inspector
15Some of the regulators
- FDA Federal Drug Administration (US)
- HPB Health Protection Branch (Canada)
- Irish Medicines Board
- MCA Medicines Control Agencies (UK)
- TGA Therapeutic Goods Administration (AUS)
16Some of the regulations guidelines
- EU 91/EEC/44-356-412 Good Manufacturing Practice
- CFR 201/211 Current Good Manufacturing Practice
- FDA Guide to Inspection of Computers Systems
- FDA Guide to Soft ware development
- FDA Compliance Policy Guidelines
- FDA Computerised Systems in Clinical Trials
(Draft 1998) - APV Interpretation of Annex 11 (1996), 91/EEC/356
- GAMP Guide
- PDA Technical Report 18- Computer Validation