Conducting and Documenting Robust Investigation for OOS Results

Conducting and Documenting Robust Investigation for OOS Results

Conducting and Documenting Robust Investigation for OOS Results

By Compliance Target

Date and time

Friday, June 20 · 10 - 11:30am PDT

Location

Online

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

Description:

The United States Pharmacopeia monographs establish standards for identity, strength, quality, and purity of medicines. Monographs list tests and acceptance criteria (usually expressed in percentage ranges or limits). Drug substances and products should meet the acceptance criteria to be considered acceptable for its intended use. An Out of Specification (OOS) occurs when a test fails to meet acceptance criteria. An OOS Investigation follows an OOS test result and is performed to determine if there is a root cause. Understanding the factors that contributed to the potency failure allows the pharmacist and laboratory to define a strategic approach in eliminating future failures. The more specific the findings, the easier it is to properly address the cause.

This training will instruct analysts and supervisors as to their responsibilities. It will explain what the FDA is looking for in terms of documenting and investigating possible contamination, human error in sampling, processing of samples and in implementing CAPAs to prevent out of specification results. This training will describe what a full investigation looks like and when it should be triggered. It will also instruct participants on the frequency of retesting and resampling.


Why Should You Attend:

Failing to properly investigate and document out of specification results can lead to several significant risks including;

  1. Regulatory non-compliance – Regulatory agencies like the FDA expect thorough investigations and documentation of OOS results to ensure product quality and patient safety. The cost of noncompliance results in warning letters and 483s as well as batch rejection and recall.
  2. Compromised product quality -OOS results can indicate that a product is not meeting its intended quality standards, potentially leading to degradation and instability.
  3. Potential patient harm – inadequately performing and documenting OOS results can lead to the drug not containing the correct concentration of active ingredients and potentially leading to ineffective treatment or an adverse drug reaction.
  4. Damage to a company's reputation - Product recalls, batch rejections, and regulatory fines can result in significant financial losses for a company. Failing to address OOS results can damage a company's reputation and erode patient trust. Repeated quality issues can lead to customers losing confidence in a company's products and services, resulting in reduced market share


Areas Covered in the Webinar:

  • Responsibilities of Analysts and Supervisors
  • Explain what the FDA looks for in terms of sampling and processing errors
  • Describe when a Full Investigation should be triggered and how it should be documented.
  • Describe Re?testing and Re?sampling frequencies
  • Implement the corrective and preventive action plans (CAPA)


Who Will Benefit:

This webinar is for professionals responsible for generating or evaluating test results in a regulated environment.

  • Lab Analysts
  • Supervisors and Managers in Pharmaceutical or Biological Laboratories
  • Quality Control and Quality Assurance Analysts

Organized by

Early bird discount
2 for 1 deal
$199 – $499