Quality Culture in the Pharmaceutical Industry


Book Description

Why so many pharmaceutical companies are struggling to meet GMP and other regulatory requirements?The reason is clear: because they are trying to improve their quality management systems by fixing symptoms rather than by attacking the fundamental and primary root cause of their problems which is the lack of adequate quality and compliance culture.The purpose of this book is to provide those leaders and senior managers with a clear roadmap to solve their regulatory problems and to return to the route of compliance by implementing a strong, positive quality and compliance culture. The recipe is simple: all you need is good people (including good leaders and senior managers), good procedures and good training programs sailing into a strong and positive culture of quality and compliance.When a company implements a behavior-based quality and culture compliance, they look into their problems as a whole, and they understand that there are multiple factors (including the soft ones related to personal and organizational behaviors) that affect performance. A very positive consequence of this systematic thinking is the shift from CAPA programs mostly correctives to ones where the systemic preventive actions are predominant.Quality is everyone's responsibility, but when it comes to creating, strengthening, or maintaining a culture within an organization, there is one group who really owns it: the leaders and senior managers.The good news is that creating or strengthening a positive and sustainable quality culture is an achievable task although not an easy or quick one. In this book you will find ten foundational principles of a strong and positive quality culture, their associated desired behaviors and a set of leading indicators that can be used to monitor and enhance leadership engagement, people engagement, and culture and maturity.




Quality Culture in the Pharmaceutical Industry


Book Description

Why so many pharmaceutical companies are struggling to meet GMP and other regulatory requirements?The reason is clear: because they are trying to improve their quality management systems by fixing symptoms rather than by attacking the fundamental and primary root cause of their problems which is the lack of adequate quality and compliance culture.The purpose of this book is to provide those leaders and senior managers with a clear roadmap to solve their regulatory problems and to return to the route of compliance by implementing a strong, positive quality and compliance culture. The recipe is simple: all you need is good people (including good leaders and senior managers), good procedures and good training programs sailing into a strong and positive culture of quality and compliance.When a company implements a behavior-based quality and culture compliance, they look into their problems as a whole, and they understand that there are multiple factors (including the soft ones related to personal and organizational behaviors) that affect performance. A very positive consequence of this systematic thinking is the shift from CAPA programs mostly correctives to ones where the systemic preventive actions are predominant.Quality is everyone's responsibility, but when it comes to creating, strengthening, or maintaining a culture within an organization, there is one group who really owns it: the leaders and senior managers.The good news is that creating or strengthening a positive and sustainable quality culture is an achievable task although not an easy or quick one. In this book you will find ten foundational principles of a strong and positive quality culture, their associated desired behaviors and a set of leading indicators that can be used to monitor and enhance leadership engagement, people engagement, and culture and maturity.




Quality Risk Management in the FDA-Regulated Industry


Book Description

Risk management principles are effectively utilized in many areas of business and government, including finance, insurance, occupational safety, and public health, and by agencies regulating these industries. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and its worldwide counterparts are responsible for protecting public health by ensuring the safety and effectiveness of the drugs and medical devices. Regulators must decide whether the benefits of a specific product for patients and users outweigh its risk, while recognizing that “absolute safety” (or zero risk) is not achievable. Every product and every process has an associated risk. Although there are some examples of the use of quality risk management in the FDA-regulated industry today, they are limited and do not represent the full contribution that risk management has to offer. The present FDA focus on risk-based determination is requiring that the regulated industries improve dramatically their understanding and capability of hazard control concepts. In addition, the importance of quality systems has been recognized in the life sciences industry, and it is becoming evident that quality risk management is a valuable component of an effective quality system. The purpose of this book is to offer a systematic and very comprehensive approach to quality risk management. It will assist medical and food product manufacturers with the integration of a risk management system or risk management principles and activities into their existing quality management system by providing practical explanations and examples. The appropriate use of quality risk management can facilitate compliance with regulatory requirements such as good manufacturing practices or good laboratory practices. The content of this book will provide FDA-regulated manufacturers with a framework within which experience, insight, and judgment are applied systematically to manage the risks associated with their products. Manufacturers in other industries may use it as an informative guidance in developing and maintaining a risk management system and process. The two appendices add even more insight: Appendix A contains general examples of risk management, while Appendix B includes 10 case studies illustrating real examples of the quality risk management process across the medical product arena.




Pharmaceutical Quality by Design


Book Description

Pharmaceutical Quality by Design: Principles and Applications discusses the Quality by Design (QbD) concept implemented by regulatory agencies to ensure the development of a consistent and high-quality pharmaceutical product that safely provides the maximum therapeutic benefit to patients. The book walks readers through the QbD framework by covering the fundamental principles of QbD, the current regulatory requirements, and the applications of QbD at various stages of pharmaceutical product development, including drug substance and excipient development, analytical development, formulation development, dissolution testing, manufacturing, stability studies, bioequivalence testing, risk and assessment, and clinical trials. Contributions from global leaders in QbD provide specific insight in its application in a diversity of pharmaceutical products, including nanopharmaceuticals, biopharmaceuticals, and vaccines. The inclusion of illustrations, practical examples, and case studies makes this book a useful reference guide to pharmaceutical scientists and researchers who are engaged in the formulation of various delivery systems and the analysis of pharmaceutical product development and drug manufacturing process. Discusses vital QbD precepts and fundamental aspects of QbD implementation in the pharma, biopharma and biotechnology industries Provides helpful illustrations, practical examples and research case studies to explain QbD concepts to readers Includes contributions from global leaders and experts from academia, industry and regulatory agencies




Leading Pharmaceutical Operational Excellence


Book Description

Achieving operational excellence is a challenge for the pharmaceutical industry, with many companies setting successful examples time and again. This book presents such leading practices for managing operational excellence throughout the pharmaceutical industry. Based on the St.Gallen OPEX Model the authors describe the current status of OPEX and the future challenges that have to be dealt with. The ample theoretical background is complemented hand-in-hand by case studies contributed by authors from leading pharmaceutical companies.​




Pharmaceutical Microbiological Quality Assurance and Control


Book Description

Relying on practical examples from the authors’ experience, this book provides a thorough and modern approach to controlling and monitoring microbial contaminations during the manufacturing of non-sterile pharmaceuticals. Offers a comprehensive guidance for non-sterile pharmaceuticals microbiological QA/QC Presents the latest developments in both regulatory expectations and technical advancements Provides guidance on statistical tools for risk assessment and trending of microbiological data Describes strategy and practical examples from the authors’ experience in globalized pharmaceutical companies and expert networks Offers a comprehensive guidance for non-sterile pharmaceuticals microbiological QA/QC Presents the latest developments in both regulatory expectations and technical advancements Provides guidance on statistical tools for risk assessment and trending of microbiological data Describes strategy and practical examples from the authors’ experience in globalized pharmaceutical companies and expert networks







Pharmaceutical Quality by Design


Book Description

A practical guide to Quality by Design for pharmaceutical product development Pharmaceutical Quality by Design: A Practical Approach outlines a new and proven approach to pharmaceutical product development which is now being rolled out across the pharmaceutical industry internationally. Written by experts in the field, the text explores the QbD approach to product development. This innovative approach is based on the application of product and process understanding underpinned by a systematic methodology which can enable pharmaceutical companies to ensure that quality is built into the product. Familiarity with Quality by Design is essential for scientists working in the pharmaceutical industry. The authors take a practical approach and put the focus on the industrial aspects of the new QbD approach to pharmaceutical product development and manufacturing. The text covers quality risk management tools and analysis, applications of QbD to analytical methods, regulatory aspects, quality systems and knowledge management. In addition, the book explores the development and manufacture of drug substance and product, design of experiments, the role of excipients, multivariate analysis, and include several examples of applications of QbD in actual practice. This important resource: Covers the essential information about Quality by Design (QbD) that is at the heart of modern pharmaceutical development Puts the focus on the industrial aspects of the new QbD approach Includes several illustrative examples of applications of QbD in practice Offers advanced specialist topics that can be systematically applied to industry Pharmaceutical Quality by Design offers a guide to the principles and application of Quality by Design (QbD), the holistic approach to manufacturing that offers a complete understanding of the manufacturing processes involved, in order to yield consistent and high quality products.




Quality by Design for Biopharmaceuticals


Book Description

The concepts, applications, and practical issues of Quality by Design Quality by Design (QbD) is a new framework currently being implemented by the FDA, as well as EU and Japanese regulatory agencies, to ensure better understanding of the process so as to yield a consistent and high-quality pharmaceutical product. QbD breaks from past approaches in assuming that drug quality cannot be tested into products; rather, it must be built into every step of the product creation process. Quality by Design: Perspectives and Case Studies presents the first systematic approach to QbD in the biotech industry. A comprehensive resource, it combines an in-depth explanation of basic concepts with real-life case studies that illustrate the practical aspects of QbD implementation. In this single source, leading authorities from the biotechnology industry and the FDA discuss such topics as: The understanding and development of the product's critical quality attributes (CQA) Development of the design space for a manufacturing process How to employ QbD to design a formulation process Raw material analysis and control strategy for QbD Process Analytical Technology (PAT) and how it relates to QbD Relevant PAT tools and applications for the pharmaceutical industry The uses of risk assessment and management in QbD Filing QbD information in regulatory documents The application of multivariate data analysis (MVDA) to QbD Filled with vivid case studies that illustrate QbD at work in companies today, Quality by Design is a core reference for scientists in the biopharmaceutical industry, regulatory agencies, and students.




Corporate Crime in the Pharmaceutical Industry (Routledge Revivals)


Book Description

First published in 1984, this book examines corporate crime in the pharmaceutical industry. Based on extensive research, including interviews with 131 senior executives of pharmaceutical companies in the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Mexico and Guatemala, the book is a major study of white-collar crime. Written in the 1980s, it covers topics such as international bribery and corruption, fraud in the testing of drugs and criminal negligence in the unsafe manufacturing of drugs. The author considers the implications of his findings for a range of strategies to control corporate crime, nationally and internationally.