March 12th 2025
Industry 4.0 is driving adoption in the pharma industry for smart equipment and tools that will advance manufacturing.
Why Search Matters: Information Retrieval in the Pharmaceutical Industry
November 1st 2004Information retrieval (IR) deals the representation, storage, organization of unstructured applying natural-language processing,semantic relationships, linguistic analyses,behavioral histories, and “fuzzy” statistical techniques to help human quickly find and retrieve the information they seek.
Integrated Information Management Approach to Drug Substance and Drug Product Scale-Up
November 1st 2004This article describes a novel approach to a scale-up management system, based on a holistic view of the scale-up lifecycle and an accompanying electronic development record of the information created.
Paperless Reporting: How to Satisfy FDA
August 1st 2004Most, if not all, pharmaceutical companies today are moving towards a paperless reporting structure. This article examines FDA's 21 CFR Part 11 regulations, which relate to technical and procedural compliance for electronic records and signatures.
Asset Management Tools for Minimizing Regulatory Risk and Maximizing Efficiency
August 1st 2004Resolving the asset headache - the author explains how effective asset management can enable pharmaceutical companies to boost operational profit, increase production uptime and adhere to regulatory standards.
21 CFR Part 11 and Risk Assessment: Adapting Fundamental Methodologies to a Current Rule
May 1st 2004FDA expects a firm that is subject to GxP to develop a risk evaluation of its product and to then mitigate the identified risks. Identified risks may be addressed by technical fixes that effectively eliminate the risks or reduce the likelihood of occurrence and/or severity of consequences to acceptable levels.
Validating Computerized Systems
December 1st 2003When implementing computerized systems, it is important that both purchasers and vendors ensure that each stage of the process (from planning through operation to modifying) is properly validated. This article looks at some of the issues that arise when switching from traditional document-based procedures, and at the benefits that computerized systems can bring.
The Hidden Economic of Calibration Management
December 1st 2003The importance of calibrating instruments used in manufacturing processes is well known, particularly for highly regulated industries such as pharmaceutical production. This article discusses software applications used to support calibration management, and the potential economic gain to be had by replacing a standalone software application with a capable enterprise system.
The Benefits of Process Information Management in R&D - A Case Study
November 1st 2003This case study examines the benefits of introducing process information management software to a pharmaceutical pilot plant. The advantages illustrate the potential for process development and commercial manufacturing improvements that are available to the pharmaceutical industry.
The Need for Effective Document Change Management in the Pharmaceutical Industry
November 1st 2003With the advent of regulations such as 21 CFR Part 11 and the introduction of the electronic common technical document, it is becoming increasingly important to be able to enhance and fully utilize data management systems. Document change management is a vital tool in the construction and organization of valuable information, and can play a key role in the all-important process of getting a product to market.
Configuring Software for Compliance with 21 CFR Part 11 Audit Trail Requirements
November 1st 2003Until specific audit trail requirements are available from the US Food and Drug Administration, manufacturers must define their own parameters for software system compliance and decide for themselves how to meet those requirements.
The End of the 21 CFR Part 11 Controversy and Confusion?
September 1st 2003More than 6 years have elapsed since the US Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) 21 CFR Part 11 regulations regarding the use of electronic records and electronic signatures came into effect.1 In February 2003, FDA issued new draft guidance concerning the scope and application of Part 11, which describes how the agency intends to interpret and enforce the requirements during its ongoing re-examination of the regulations.2 Many people in the pharmaceutical industry have welcomed this new guidance and see it as a positive development that will lead to a simplified FDA approach to Part 11 and a significant reduction in the industry's compliance burden.