Introduction to CAPA Software


Medical device companies must have a compliant Corrective Action Preventive Action (CAPA) process in place to comply with FDA 21 CFR 820.100. A collaborative Quality system lets you check this FDA requirement “box”, while facilitating corporate objectives. In fact, even non-regulated companies in competitive industries require effective quality systems in order to compete in time to market, customer satisfaction, and cost control.

In order for the CAPA subsystem of a Quality system to be FDA Compliant – here is what you must demonstrate:

“The purpose of the corrective and preventive action subsystem is to collect information, analyze information, identify and investigate product and quality problems, and take appropriate and effective corrective and/or preventive action to prevent their recurrence. Verifying or validating corrective and preventive actions, communicating corrective and preventive action activities to responsible people, providing relevant information for management review, and documenting these activities are essential in dealing effectively with product and quality problems, preventing their recurrence, and preventing or minimizing device failures. One of the most important quality system elements is the corrective and preventive action subsystem.”
FDA CAPA Inspection Guide

Home-grown, paper-based, or commercially available electronic systems may meet the minimum FDA requirements. However, most companies today want to go further than just checking the “box”, they want to capture and expand market share. If true, consider the following two questions:

  • What are the basic elements of a compliant CAPA subsystem?
  • What makes a QMS system, including the CAPA subsystem collaborative?

CAPA Basics: Meet the Requirements

Your CAPA processes will be managed by the CAPA subsystem of your quality management system (QMS). Your QMS may be a home-grown system(s) or use a commercial quality solution. Either way, your system must adhere to the requirements listed in FDA 21 CFR 820.100. This is a significant hurdle for conducting business for FDA regulated companies. Not everyone can overcome this hurdle. According to the latest available statistics at the time of this publication1, the FDA issued 3513 findings referencing 21 CFR 820 (issued via Form 483) to Medical Device Companies. An astonishing 515 of those observations, pertained to 820.100 or CAPA systems. Here are CAPA related 483s by subcategory.

Ref. NoShort DescriptionLong DescriptionFrequency
3130 21 CFR 820.100(a)Lack of or inadequate proceduresProcedures for corrective and preventive action have not been [adequately] established.400
3696 21 CFR 820.100(b)DocumentationCorrective and preventive action activities and/or results have not been [adequately] documented.115

1. 2017 – FDA EIR database

A modern Quality Management System, with CAPA software built-in, helps avoid CAPA related 483s in two ways. During internal audits, it provides visibility into issues before the inspector arrives. During FDA audits, it also simplifies demonstrating compliance with these regulations.

To meet FDA regulation 820.100, the CAPA subsystem of management processes of the QMS system must have:

  • The ability to capture, review, approve, control, and retrieve established CAPA processes.
  • The ability to capture and retrieve CAPA activities and/or results.
  • A closed-loop process (including workflow and signoff) to facilitate verification or validation that the action is effective and does not adversely affect the finished device.
  • A closed-loop process (including workflow and signoff) to ensure documentation of corrective and preventive action activities are established, defined, documented, complete, and implemented.
  • The ability to capture, review, approve, control, and retrieve a corrective and preventive action procedure to determine when verification can be conducted in lieu of validation.

In summary, a QMS system must have the ability to capture, review, approve, control, and retrieve closed-loop processes.

The Difference: The Collaborative Quality System

You didn’t start your company just so that you could keep the doors open with compliant systems. You want as many people as possible to benefit from your product. In business terms: you want to capture and expand market share. To do that, you need to accelerate time to market, maximize quality, and control costs. How do companies meet these goals?

CAPA software encourages collaboration

Collaboration.

Collaborating among departments and throughout your supply chain is the key to delivering a high-quality product to market as quickly as possible. Collaborate throughout the product lifecycle–from the product conception to limited production to full production. Marketing, quality, engineering, field service, operations, suppliers, can all help bring the best product to market. It’s possible with the right system in place.

CAPA Software: 5 Essential Elements

1. Organizes all documents and processes around the product bill of materials

If you want all internal stakeholders and external partners to collaborate throughout the product lifecycle, you must organize 100% of your product data in a single, secure system. That system should contain all of your product data; electrical, mechanical, software, and documentation used to manufacture your products. With minimal training, everyone can understand this concept, facilitating collaboration throughout the organization.

2. Supports the global enterprise

In order to include employees, suppliers, and customers in your processes, the system must easily support the extended enterprise which often spans the globe. Doing this in the first phase of implementation with minimal impact to your IT resources will enable you to enjoy the benefits of a collaboration more quickly and with less overhead.

3. Manages the CAPA process, including tasks, assignments, deadlines, all connected to affected products and documents

The collaborative quality system will enforce your CAPA business processes. With a process that can impact the entire organization, you need a system that can track key activities and provide a historical audit trail. By linking to the affected documents, users of the documents can see there is a pending action against the document and even open that action to come up to speed.

To speed implementation, the quality system should come configured with standard quality processes, like Eight Disciplines of Problem Solving (or “8D”).

Why reinvent the wheel? The best quality management systems (and the people who define, create, and support CAPA processes) understand current, established best practices. Having a versatile system to support proven best practice quality processes reduces the time to implement and yields key benefits as companies address quality issues before, during and after shipping their products to market. The system should also be flexible enough to support custom processes when needed.

4. Integrates quality processes with engineering change process

A CAPA incident (or Corrective Action Request) may require an ECO to resolve a product problem. When that happens, you want the Quality team to have visibility into the engineering change process. Likewise, engineering teams should have visibility into quality issues that link directly to the affected product.

Users should have visibility into all pending or released quality issues and engineering changes to enable easy research of all historical activity.

Integrating the engineering and quality processes eliminates the need for duplicate data entry or the need for cross-referencing with attribute data. You can quickly view and drill into related records.

5. Provides analytics for understanding the strengths and bottlenecks of your processes

With analytics, process owners see process metrics in real-time, so they can apply resources to meet business objectives. Modern analytics are so easy to use, you don’t need to program reports. You always have instant access to real-time data.

Conclusion

Using a compliant Quality Management System, with CAPA software built-in, your company will be ahead of the 515 companies with CAPA related FDA 483s. You will be compliant and maintain compliance with less anxiety and overhead.

Including all departments and suppliers as part of your CAPA process will shorten time to market, control spend, and improve product quality. You will capture and expand market share, enhancing quality while helping more patients with your products.