Implementing a critical-to-quality (CTQ) program in your life science organization’s product development process can be a valuable effort. Identifying CTQ requirements and working through both CTQ Flowdown and Flowup activities can lead to more robust, well-made products that meet your user needs.
But how do you know if a CTQ requirement is effective? By making them understandable, verifiable, and attainable.
This can result in the CTQ being improperly developed or additional work. Therefore, it’s important to make sure your requirements are clearly stated, address one thing with simple interpretation, and don’t contradict other requirements. Otherwise, the threshold for confusion in later-stage development lowers, and could result in remediation or other adverse effects.
Unclear requirements are also troublesome because they aren’t verifiable. The work involved in advancing a CTQ is lost if there’s no way to confirm whether it has been satisfied. To empower CTQ verification, there are three methods your team can leverage:
Likewise, verifiable CTQs resolve supply chain issues. Verification problems that occur after tech transfer to the supply chain often mean either the supplier is noncompliant, technology transfers were incomplete or insufficient, something in the product design is impacting verification/overall quality, or the CTQ’s verification requirements need adjustment. In the event verification requirements need adjustment, having verification measurements and requirements in place are diagnostic—they can help you easily and quickly spot problems before they get further compounded down the supply chain.
Evaluating a CTQ with the notion in mind of attainability/feasibility helps you produce and alter the flowdown requirements in ways that satisfy the overall CTQ and associated user needs. To determine attainability, three specific factors are often at play: cost, time, and tech. Whether or not the cost to construct a requirement is feasible impacts your organization’s ability to realize it, as well as the time it takes to make it. Likewise, technical factors such as equipment, training, materials, and other resource considerations need to be accounted for when determining the attainability of a given CTQ.
CTQs are tied to user needs and identify features or characteristics of your product that are integral to satisfying those needs. They can be useful in cutting through the noise of all the data generated as the result of life science product development and in prioritizing your activities. Being able to identify how effective the CTQ is based on its understandability, verifiability, and attainability can streamline your development activities and optimize the product design to satisfy your users’ needs.