Live -Webinar 2014 - "Batch Production Record and Device History Record Review and Quality Assessment"
Topics/Call fo Papers
DESCRIPTION
Typical Elements Required to be Included in the Batch Production Record and the Device History Record in order to Accomplish a Quality and Cost Effective Review and Quality Assessment based on current Regulatory Expectations.
Why should you attend
A vast majority of the current industry deficiencies which have led to isolated 483s, Warning Letters and Consent Decrees are the result of deficient technical documentation of the production processes for both injectables, devices and solid dosages.
Quality Systems require both Operations and Quality Departments to be unified with the overall intent of minimizing patient risk by documenting the process in a fashion that is technically accurate and easy to demonstrate that we are thinking and operating with the same objectives as the regulatory agencies are required to enforce
Description of the topic
Written procedures are to be established and followed for a time efficient and clear evidence of the quality related elements during the review and approval for release, including packaging and labeling, to determine compliance of the intermediates (FDA definition) and/or finished product with established specifications before a batch can be released for distribution
BPRs, DHRs and laboratory control records for critical process steps are to be reviewed and approved by the quality unit(s) before a finished product batch is released for distribution. Production and laboratory control records for earlier, non-critical process steps may be reviewed by qualified production personnel or other units following procedures approved by the quality unit(s).
All incidents or deviations, investigation, and OOS, OOT, OOL reports should be reviewed to ensure there is no product quality impact by providing technically written sound scientific rationale for the assessment and conclusion as part of the batch record review before the batch is released.
Areas Covered in the Session
Generation of BPRs, DHRs and SOPs to provide technically written instruction sets to eliminate operator errors. Training is NOT the primary means of generating and error free operation
Production and In-Process Controls
Inspection, Packaging and Identification Labeling of Finished Products and Intermediates
Responsibilities for Production Activities
Data selection and entry into the statistical tracking from the BPR and DHR
Incident / Deviation Tracking along with Customer Complaints and CAPA changes
Annual Reports
Who will benefit:
Quality and Documentation Personnel within the industry
Typical Elements Required to be Included in the Batch Production Record and the Device History Record in order to Accomplish a Quality and Cost Effective Review and Quality Assessment based on current Regulatory Expectations.
Why should you attend
A vast majority of the current industry deficiencies which have led to isolated 483s, Warning Letters and Consent Decrees are the result of deficient technical documentation of the production processes for both injectables, devices and solid dosages.
Quality Systems require both Operations and Quality Departments to be unified with the overall intent of minimizing patient risk by documenting the process in a fashion that is technically accurate and easy to demonstrate that we are thinking and operating with the same objectives as the regulatory agencies are required to enforce
Description of the topic
Written procedures are to be established and followed for a time efficient and clear evidence of the quality related elements during the review and approval for release, including packaging and labeling, to determine compliance of the intermediates (FDA definition) and/or finished product with established specifications before a batch can be released for distribution
BPRs, DHRs and laboratory control records for critical process steps are to be reviewed and approved by the quality unit(s) before a finished product batch is released for distribution. Production and laboratory control records for earlier, non-critical process steps may be reviewed by qualified production personnel or other units following procedures approved by the quality unit(s).
All incidents or deviations, investigation, and OOS, OOT, OOL reports should be reviewed to ensure there is no product quality impact by providing technically written sound scientific rationale for the assessment and conclusion as part of the batch record review before the batch is released.
Areas Covered in the Session
Generation of BPRs, DHRs and SOPs to provide technically written instruction sets to eliminate operator errors. Training is NOT the primary means of generating and error free operation
Production and In-Process Controls
Inspection, Packaging and Identification Labeling of Finished Products and Intermediates
Responsibilities for Production Activities
Data selection and entry into the statistical tracking from the BPR and DHR
Incident / Deviation Tracking along with Customer Complaints and CAPA changes
Annual Reports
Who will benefit:
Quality and Documentation Personnel within the industry
Other CFPs
Last modified: 2014-07-05 16:27:40