Sunday, August 3, 2014

The Quality Management Triad: a Model for Performance Sustainability

Establishing a sustainable Quality Management System that helps a company to become an anticipating, rather than a reactive organization requires intentional effort to bring three essential element together. I call these elements the Quality Management Triad.




The first part is Quality Governance, this is the body that provides:

    • Vision—the aspirational view of the future, and how Quality Management is integral to the business strategy for operational performance and continuous product availability to patients;

    • Leadership—the top business unit and functional heads who motivate, align, plan, and engage the organization toward its quality goals;

    • Standards—endorse the policies and norms, which establish the quality requirements—the interpretation of laws and regulations to your operation—the “what” is required;

    • Oversight—the communication channels and forums that give Leadership visibility to product quality and compliance risks and trends—in order to make effective data-driven decisions—and provide Leadership the means to exercise management responsibility.

The second part is the Pharmaceutical Quality System (which is the ICH Q10 term for the Quality Management System). The Pharmaceutical Quality System—or PQS:

    •  Management System—the totality of policies, standards, processes that directs and controls activities with regard to quality;

    • Processes—to ensure consistency and intentional ways of working when applying the standards to your operation—and to control variables, including the human variable;    

    • State of Control—quality is about controlling variation, and the Pharmaceutical Quality System provide the capability of self-detecting and self-correcting problems and give us a clear picture of our current state of control.

    • Continuous Improvementknowing the top regulatory compliance risks at any give time and having project teams directed toward resolving them with verifiably effective solutions.


The third part is Quality System Ownership, which is the specific application of the concept of Business Process Ownership that sets expectations and accountability for managing the constituent parts of the Pharmaceutical Quality System:  Ownership responsibility includes:

    • Execution—they manage the daily operation of the quality processes described in procedures and ensure procedures are effective;

    • Maintenance—they ensure that the quality process remains current with regulatory requirements and industry practices; and remain applicable to your changing business;

    • Performance—they measure how well the process is working and identify problems with the process, and problems that the process detects—and always seeking ways to meet the requirements in the most efficient way.

    • Escalation—they identify unacceptable conditions or events that puts the patient and the business at risk—and take the immediate actions necessary to mitigate the risk, and make recommendations for permanently solving the problem.

At the center is the Quality function whose responsibility it is to engineer the processes for these three parts, and to ensure that they work—and work together effectively.
To be clear—quality is everyone’s responsibility. Much like Safety is everyone’s responsibility, it is the Quality function’s responsibility to establish the ways and means for the Quality Management Triad; and ensure effectiveness.

Why is The Quality Management Triad important?

The pharmaceutical industry is a dynamic business environment.  Acquisitions, operational realignment, portfolio changes, manufacturing relocation, facility re-purposing, and organization restructuring and integration are among the strategies to increase stockholder value. These continual changes impact the Quality Management System, and like any other aspect of the operation, it must be managed to remain effective and relevant.

Take this hypothetical example: 

A single-ingredient, solid-oral tablet manufacturer that constructed a dedicated facility for their new product.

Later, high-potency, multi-ingredient tablets were introduced into this facility as line extensions. The facility was then expanded to manufacture oral liquids and eventually retrofitted to produce oral suspension products.

Plans were being made to introduce parenteral drugs into the facility when the decision was made to enter into an agreement with a contract manufacturing operation—a CMO—for that technology, which was the firm’s first venture into a third-party partnership.

All the while, volumes were increasing, markets became global and the company turned to a twenty-four seven operation to keep up with demand. The increased profitability was directed toward the development of promising new drugs, while operating expenses were reduced and tightly controlled to fund new initiatives.

While this was great news for investors and employees, an unintended consequence was quietly undermining the business. The Pharmaceutical Management System had not evolved with the business, and was no longer capable of reliably detecting and managing product quality and compliance risks.

“Loss of management control” was the underlying theme of the series of FDA483s and the eventual warning letter when the site was fraught with recurring manufacturing deviations, missed target dates, and ineffective solutions promised to the Agency.

Although this is a hypothetical case, many people identify with some parts of this story when I share it.

Unfortunately, the Quality Management System is often viewed as a resilient tome of instructional content with little susceptibility to changes in the business environment. Nothing could be farther from reality.

Quality professionals across the industry who have looked back at their past quality problems and regulatory enforcement action, say—ironically—that their Quality Management System was a victim of their success.

Whatever the environment, the Quality Management System must be managed to ensure that it is Fit-for-Purpose and that it continually serves and protects the business.

The Quality Management Triad is a key element of a business strategy to sustain performance and ensure a continuous supply of quality product to patients.



The QA Pharm