Nov 2, 2016
Librairie technique
When working with old and ageing equipment and computer systems, many immediate concerns come to mind; availability of spare parts, operational reliability, lack of hard and/or software support from the supplier… However, few remembers the major issue currently faced by many old pharmaceutical production sites. The rapid development of computer systems and their capacity to generate, log, and store information about the process and the outcome of any given batch production, have given computer systems an increasingly important role in modern pharmaceutical productions. However, when does the information logged by the computer system become data? when does the data become GxP-‐data? How can we trust the integrity or rather validity, of the data? And finally how can we document that the requirements to the data, imposed by the authorities are met? This paper will try to combine the information available from FDA (US Food and Drug Administration) and EMA (European medicines Agency) along with experience gained from working in an old production site, with the aim of raising awareness about the issue. 3 DATA The following will try to elaborate on the definitions of data stated by FDA and EMA, and put them in relation to the data flow in typical computer systems in a production. One of the important discussion points is what is data?
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This White Paper was written by Philippe, Nalys Pharmaceutical engineer.