Compliance from the start—why make it a priority in life science product development?
That question is a loaded one, and answers vary depending on who you ask. Compliance-first takes many forms, and each organization sees a different advantage from it. However, there are a number of key benefits the compliance-first approach can offer your organization that are fairly common across the industry. Getting a sense of what those gains look like can help you work toward transforming your product development activities.
By taking a compliance-first approach, you aim all your development activities around a single objective. While the bundle of activities is still there, it all has a unifying focus.
The singular focus a compliance-first approach can bring comes with opportunities to optimize and streamline your development activities as well. For example, you can adjust standard operating procedures (SOPs) to adhere to regulatory requirements better. Likewise, superfluous activities can be identified and eliminated out of the process to cut down on waste.
Streamlining an SOP to more tightly line up with regulatory requirements is one great benefit of a compliance-first approach, but there are many more. In particular, this alignment can produce deliverables ready for submission and review by regulatory bodies. Rather than having to massage project data into compliance-ready documents, the SOPs produce those documents as a natural output, saving time and resources.
With a compliance-first approach, it’s easier to integrate risk management activities into the development process earlier, and compliance-ready processes can be focused on moving outputs into the risk analysis process. In combination with a robust design and development plan, this adjustment and integration of risk management can be transformative long-term.
Chief among the concerns of regulatory bodies like FDA is “inherent safety by design.” They want to see that as much risk has been designed out of your product as possible. Infusing this concern into your activities, especially with the earlier integration of risk management, can promote a more unified vision of your product with your development teams and provide a communicable goal for your end product.
Likewise, a compliance-first approach ensures that your design and development activities are less prone to inspectional observations, FDA Form 483s, and warning letters. With a significant amount of Design Controls citations given out in FY2017, FDA has made it clear they are staying on top of premarket activities in life science industries. Having compliance-ready processes and deliverables available for audits and inspections shows that your organization understands and works toward compliance every day.