Compounding Centers get new and more regulations
October 25th, 2016 by Peter CalcottI just had an article describing the Compounding industry and what the FDA is doing about it. Here is the link.
I just had an article describing the Compounding industry and what the FDA is doing about it. Here is the link.
During the last few months the European Medicines Agency (EMA) has issued a series of revisions to Annexes and Guidances
Specifically, the following
Annex 15 – Validation and Qualification
Annex 16 – Certification by a Qualified Person and Batch Release
Annex 17 – Real Time Release Testing
Guidance to Industry: Guideline on process validation for the manufacture of biotechnology-derived active substances and data to be provided in the regulatory submission
To understand what they contain and what it means, I refer you to an article I wrote recently in
Guidances have been issued by the FDA and EMA for over three years now. So are companies complying or are they finding it tough? Read an article I wrote in Contract Pharma Article. Happy reading
Single use components have been used in operations for decades but their use is expanding rapidly. The agencies are taking a closer look. Just published an interesting article on the topic in BioPharmaceutical International . Enjoy the read
Do you have deviations that just won’t go away? Do they disappear for a couple of months only to reappear a few months later stronger than ever? Have you ever wondered why?
I won’t try to say that there is one cause for this but one that I have found continuously is Human Error as a major cause of the problem. The obvious CAPA for this observation is to retrain the operator and rewrite the SOP. I have seen it often in companies.
When I go in to audit the QMS, this is one area I look for first. I look at the CAPAs and tally up the retrain operator and the rewrite SOP ones and if I find it happens more than 10% of the time, I know where to focus. Investigations are not thorough or in depth.
On a recent visit to a client, they had just exited from a grueling inspection by an agency with a total of 53 observations. They had developed their responses which are really CAPAs in any other language. There were a total of 135 CAPAs and 55% were “retrain operator” or “rewrite SOP”. I asked the person in charge of getting the responses back and asked whether he thought it would correct the problem. His reply was an honest “No, many of these problems we’ve seen before and tried that and it never works”. So, I ask him why are you doing it again, remembering Einstein’s quote “insanity is doing the same thing again and expecting a different result”. At least I think it’s Einstein.
I then asked, “Why did you do this when you know it will not work?” The answer was a chilling “because the regulators will accept it and it will allow me to get back to making product!” I wanted to say “Yes, in the same broken way as before”.
After talking with other people at the plant it became clear that their investigation skills and tools were deficient. They could get to the human error point. They recognized that somebody had made an error but they lacked the tools to investigate further as to why it occurred. Was it a system that was defective, were the operators overloaded with work, were the work stations organized appropriately?
Very rarely is Human Error the root cause but rather Human Error is the symptom of things not functioning properly. It is often the result of a deficiency elsewhere. No other industry accepts human error just our pharmaceutical one.
There are four main ways that that things fail and manifest as human errors. There has been plenty of research in this area but not in pharmaceuticals.
As you read through the examples above, you will see a lot of similarity and overlap and that is because, it is rarely only one of the above that fails. It actually starts at the management level with culture. They set the tone that creates the systems, procedures and people to fail.
So how can you detect that you have a culture problem? A systems problem? Poor procedures? Or people prone to human errors?
You know you have problem or potentially one if you can say yes to any of the following:
Culture Problems include
System problems are evident by these
Procedure problems are exemplified by
Which brings us to People
Of course this is not a comprehensive list but you get the picture!!
To get rid of all these types of problem requires both management and workers to take responsibility. We must move to a culture exemplified by
The road is a long one fraught with challenges but as my father used to wisely tell me “Knowing you have a problem is 50% of the way to solving it”. How true!!!!