1
International API Inspection Pilot Program
Olivier GrossScientific AdministratorEMEA
DIA International ConferenceQuality of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients5th – 7th September 2009
Any views expressed are those of the author and should not be understood as those of EMEA or its scientific committees
3
27 EU Member States and 42 national authorities
5 operational MRAPartners
3 EEA countries
1 “Advanced MRA” (ACCA)partner
4
GMP Inspections within EMEA (1)
No inspectors at EMEA, only coordination of inspections done by the 27 Member States
Different type of inspections for APIs and FP - Pre-authorisation Inspections - Post-Authorisation Inspections- Re-inspections every 2-3 years
Most of the inspections coordinated by EMEA are not in EEA
5
GMP Inspections within EMEA (2)
In EEA, EMEA relies on the inspections performed by EEA authorities of their manufacturing sites on their territories every 2-3 years
EMEA relies also on inspections carried out by MRA countries (Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Japan)
Quarterly meetings of GMP Inspectors Working Group
6
Main GMP inspection challenges in EU (1)
Ensure continued protection of Public Health with scarce resources and budgets
Increasing regulatory requirements and expectations with more and more global operations.
Concerns about the supply chain in the legal and illegal sector with a growth in counterfeit activity
7
Main GMP inspection challenges in EU (2)
More and more complex supply chains and a fundamental shift of the manufacturing sites of APIs outside EU leading to an increasing European and international and focus on the quality of APIs
For each product a large numbers of API manufacturers involved, intermediates, API starting materials, alternative sources
Responsibility of the GMP compliance of the API manufacturer relies with the QP of the Finished Product.
8
International Collaboration activities (1)
Number of mechanisms for international partnership between EU and other countries
- EEA countries, accession countries, EDQM, WHO, PIC/S
- Mutual Recognition Agreements (MRA)- Confidentiality arrangements: FDA, Japanese
MHLW, Canada,- EU - US Transatlantic administrative simplification
9
International Collaboration activities (2)
IT exchange tools :May 2007 launch of EudraGMP database
GMP information on inspections performed by EU and MRA partners
further release to include a module for sharing inspection plans
US FDA Compliance status database (COMSTAT)
10
Background for the project (1)
Global supply chain for APIs / Global regulatory environment (ICH)
Increasing demand for international collaboration on inspection work sharing on a risk-based approach
Quality issues in 2008 for products with API manufactured outside EU (e.g. heparin)
New EU legislative proposals expected to impact approaches to GMP API inspections
11
Background for the project (2)
Need of better use of International inspectional resources allowing an increase inspectional coverage outside participating regions
Coordination/collaboration/information between authorities on sites of common interest can contribute to risk based approaches and improve inspection efficiency.
12
The project : Starting up
Authorities performing significant number of inspections of APIs outside of their territories approached by EMEA end 2007EU : France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, United KingdomMRA : Australian TGACouncil of Europe : EDQMUS : FDA
All agreed to participate in a pilot phase to last for 18 months with recommendation for future action
13
The project : Tools of the program (1)
Objectives developed into :Update on a pilot project to collaborate on international GMP
inspection activities http://www.emea.europa.eu/Inspections/docs/43043807enrev1.pdf
Rules of engagement and procedures for participating authorities (active pharmaceutical ingredients/active substances)
http://www.emea.europa.eu/Inspections/docs/41432308en.pdf
14
The project : Tools of the program (2)
Confidentiality agreements signed between the participating authorities to allow sharing of inspection plans
Template spreadsheet for exchange of inspection planning's, retrospective and prospective, defined.
APIs –Jurisdiction- Name of the site –Address-Zip Code- City- state/Province—Country- Last inspection- C/NC- Planned inspection-Category-Sterile-
.
15
The project : Running of the program (1)
Use of a common GMP standard = ICH Q7Each involved authority responsible for any follow-up
actions (e.g. administrative or enforcement)Always right to perform “own” inspectionsAll authorities to ensure if possible an agreed
conclusion in case of joint inspection
16
The project : Running of the program (2)
Organisation of bilateral and general teleconferences to built up the program and define a strategy for the sites of common interest :
July 2008 : AFSSAPS, IMB, EDQM, EMEA, MHRA, TGA, USFDA, ZLGSeptember 2008 : AFSSAPS, IMB, EDQM, EMEA, MHRA, TGA, USFDA, ZLGDecember 2008 : EDQM, EMEA, USFDA,March 2009 : EMEA, USFDAApril 2009 : EMEA , TGAApril 2009 : TGA, USFDA May 2009 : EDQM , TGA July 2009 : AIFA, AFSSAPS, IMB, EDQM, EMEA, MHRA, TGA, USFDA
17
The project : Running of the program (3)
Main activities to be developed within the program based on the sharing of inspections planning:
- Sharing of inspection reports of passed inspections- Sharing of inspection reports of future inspections
with or without scope extension- Joint inspection with or without scope extension.
18
Scenario a: inspection report sharing
API manufacturer in
third country
EU willing to inspect and to
share the report with US
US willing to inspect
INSPECTIONAPI 1
INSPECTIONAPI 1
a: US delegates to EU
19
Scenario b: inspection report sharing with expanded scope
API manufacturer in
third country
US willing to inspect AP1 +
AP2 and share the report with EU
EU willing to inspect API 2
INSPECTIONAPI 1
INSPECTIONAPI 2
b: EU ask US to expand scope
20
Scenario c: collaborative inspection
API manufacturer in third country
Joint inspected by EU + US
EU willing to inspect US willing to inspect
Decision of joint inspection
21
The project : Key Performance Indicators
Increased transparency and visibility of inspectionsDecrease in “duplicate inspections”
inspections of the same product or sites carried out by more than one authority within a similar time period
Overall (pre-approval and surveillance/post-approval/GMP) increase in number of sites of API inspected relative to 2006-2008 figuresIncrease in number of inspections performed of value to more than one authorityPositive assessment of the deliverablesRegulatory capacity building in countries with emerging API industry.
22
The Project : Retrospective data Retrospective inspection data (2006-2007-2008) provided by : EDQM (124), USFDA (215), AFSSAPS (55), TGA (47), MHRA (31), and EMEA (63) . Total 535 API manufacturing sites outside the participating countries
91 (17 %) API manufacturing sites were inspected in the last 3 years by more than one of the above mentioned inspectorates.
- 74 were inspected by two different inspectorates from which 30 sites where inspected within 6-7 month - 16 were inspected by 3different inspectorates - 1 was inspected by 4 different inspectorates
23
The project : Results in 2009 (1)
EMEA 99
EDQM 125
FDA 42
TGA 174
AFSSAPS 9
AIFA 4
ZLG 3
IMB 2
MHRA 31
Total 489 sites shared 489
Inspection Reports Done 6
Requested 14
Proposed 12
Total 32Joint
Inspections Done 6
Confirmed 2
Asked 10
Proposed 2
Total 20
24
The project : Results in 2009 (2)
489 sites identified and shared 103 Sites common to at least 2 participants identified for possible cooperation
NCA Nb of Sites Nb of Hits % Collaboration
EMEA 99 53 50 % 10 IR + 11 JIEDQM 125 45 36 % 9 IR + 6 JITGA 147 87 60 % 15 IR + 13 JIFDA 42 28 66 % 8 IR + 8 JI
25
The project : Next steps
Regular teleconferences and e-mail exchanges for the development of the program, the organisation of joint inspections and sharing of inspection reports.
Improving process monitoring:Gather more data on site inspections planning (all sites, APIs)Reporting tools (e.g. feedback form)
Reliance on each other’s inspections will increase resource available to cover more sites
Enlarge the number of participants Enlarge the scope after ending the first 18-month cycle
26
Conclusion
Working together is challengingNeed to have recognition of each other’s
environments, organisation, expertise Significant collaborative work underwayCooperation of Regulatory authorities is in the
interest of Public Health worldwide. Communication will be the key to success
27
European Medicines Agency 7, Westferry CircusCanary WharfLondon E14 4HBUnited Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7418 8400Fax: +44 (0) 20 7418 [email protected]@[email protected]
www.emea.europa.eu
28
AbbreviationsEMEA- European Medicines AgencyCVMP - Committee for Medicinal Products for Veterinary useCHMP - Committee for Medicinal Products for Human useCOMP - Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products HMPC - Committee for Herbal Medicinal Products PDCO – Committee for Paediatric Medicinal ProductsMS – Member StatesEU – European UnionEEA – European Economic AreaEDQM – European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines and HealthcareMRA – Mutual Recognition AgreementsPIC/S - Pharmaceutical Inspection Cooperation SchemeWHO - World Health OrganisationAPI- Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (term active substance used in EEA)ICH/VICH International Conference on Harmonisation/Veterinary equivalent
Top Related