Pharmaceutical R&D, Scale-Up, and CAPA Processes Overview

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36 Terms

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Research and Development (R&D)

The department in a pharmaceutical company responsible for developing and formulating new drug products.

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Lab Scale

The initial, small-scale production of a new drug formula, typically around 100 g.

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Pilot Plant

The facility in a pharmaceutical industry where a lab scale formula is tested and transformed into a viable product on a larger scale before full production. It serves as the bridge between R&D and Production.

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Pilot Batch

A medium-sized batch (e.g., 1000 g or 1 kg) produced in a pilot plant to determine if a new drug can be efficiently, economically, and consistently reproduced on a production scale.

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Scale-Up (Production Scale)

The process of taking a formula that has been proven in a pilot plant and manufacturing it in large quantities (e.g., 10,000 g or 10 kg) for the market.

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Batch Manufacturing Record (BMR)

A detailed written document prepared for every batch, containing actual data and step-by-step instructions for the entire manufacturing process.

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Bill of Materials (BOM)

A part of the BMR that lists all raw and packaging materials needed for a batch, including material name, lot/reference number, and quantity. It is issued by the warehouse.

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Batch Record (in BMR)

The first page of the BMR that contains all key information about the batch, such as batch number, batch size, composition, manufacturing/expiry dates, and storage conditions.

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Manufacturing Process (in BMR)

The section of the BMR providing the step-by-step procedure for compounding, compression, encapsulation, coating, and packaging.

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Line Clearance

A mandatory check performed before starting every manufacturing process to ensure the production line is clean, free from previous materials, and ready for the new batch.

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Yield (in BMR)

The amount of product produced, which is calculated at the end of every stage to measure process loss. The final yield should not be less than 99.00%.

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Equipment Cleaning Record (in BMR)

A checklist confirming the cleaning of all equipment used for a batch, including the previous product, batch number, and date of cleaning. It is checked by Quality Assurance.

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Standard Operating Procedure (SOP)

A detailed, written instruction that describes exactly how to perform a specific process or activity to ensure consistency and quality.

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Purpose of an SOP

To ensure operations are performed consistently, maintain quality control, ensure safety, comply with regulations, and serve as a training document.

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Who writes and reviews SOPs?

Written by individuals knowledgeable about the activity, reviewed by others with appropriate training, and tested by users before being finalized.

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Header (of an SOP)

The section at the top of every page containing the company name/logo, document title, SOP number, page number, department, and key dates (Issue, Review, Effectivity).

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Issue Date (SOP Header)

The date from which the SOP is distributed to relevant departments.

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Effectivity Date (SOP Header)

The date from which the SOP must be officially put into use.

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Review Date (SOP Header)

The date by which the SOP must be revised or reviewed to ensure it remains current.

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Supersedes (SOP Header)

Refers to the SOP number of the previous version that this document is replacing.

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Signature Block (of an SOP)

Appears only on the first page and contains the signatures, typed names, and designations of the persons who Prepared, Verified, and Approved the SOP.

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Body (of an SOP)

The main content of the SOP, containing the Objective, Scope, Responsibility, Procedure, and other key information.

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Objective (SOP Body)

Defines the purpose of the SOP (the "why").

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Scope (SOP Body)

Defines the area of application for the SOP (the "where" and "what").

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Responsibility (SOP Body)

Refers to the people or roles that perform and monitor the procedure (the "who").

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Procedure (SOP Body)

The detailed, step-by-step process on how the SOP should be performed (the "how").

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Revision History (SOP Body)

A list of previous versions of the SOP indicating the reason(s) for revision.

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Corrective and Preventive Action (CAPA)

A formal process to investigate, solve, and prevent the recurrence of problems by addressing their root causes.

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Ultimate Purpose of CAPA

To ensure that a problem, once solved, can never be experienced again.

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Step 1 of CAPA: Identification

Clearly and completely defining the problem, including its source, a detailed explanation, and all available evidence.

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Step 2 of CAPA: Evaluation

Assessing the potential impact and risk of the problem to determine the need for and level of action required.

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Step 3 of CAPA: Investigation

Creating a written plan to investigate the problem, including the objectives, strategy, and assignment of responsibility.

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Step 4 of CAPA: Analysis

Using the investigation plan to collect data and identify the primary root cause of the problem, as well as any contributing causes.

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Step 5 of CAPA: Action Plan

Developing a detailed plan that lists all tasks required to correct the problem and prevent its recurrence, including assigned responsibilities and deadlines.

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Step 6 of CAPA: Implementation

Executing the action plan by initiating, completing, and documenting all the required tasks.

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Step 7 of CAPA: Follow-up

Evaluating the actions taken to verify their successful completion and to assess their effectiveness in permanently solving the problem.