CAPA Process Improvements

Introduction 

Errors are usually a part of any process, action, or activity. There is always a percentage of error that happens. The practice must be to refine it and bring the errors down as low as humanly possible.  

To adhere with industry regulations and to remain compliant with various policies, quality processes of organizations have multiple checks and internal policies in place to address the non-compliances and errors that occur during the lifecycle of manufacturing a product. The focus of these processes is to address the errors, analyze them, fix them and ensure that they do not occur again.  

Often during this process, the regulatory burden makes it difficult for quality process individuals to provide their complete focus to solving the errors in a way that they are traceable backward, permanently fixed, and provide insights about any matters that need to be addressed immediately. 

One of the most talked-about and feared issues in a quality process is the CAPA. Corrective Action and Preventive action is in fact an opportunity for improvements in the quality processes.  

Pain points of CAPA Process 

In MDIC Case for a quality program, organizations highlighted the mindset that has been built over the years due to the regulatory burden.   

“Our staff dreads being assigned a CAPA.  It is burdensome and is seen as a punishment instead of an improvement opportunity”  

“Our CAPA system is bloated and is focused on creating documents instead of resolving issues”  

 *Source – MDIC cfq whitepaper. 

MDIC Case for Quality initiative conducted in-depth research and released the top 3 pain points that were put forth by people handling quality processes.  

  1. Lack of clarity on whether an issue should be treated as a CAPA or not – The research found that more than 70% of the CAPAs reviewed could be managed through existing quality systems and did not require to go through the CAPA Process.  
  2. Overlap and duplication issues leading to redundant work – Not knowing if a similar issue has occurred before either as a non-conformance, complaint or even a CAPA is a void that needs to be addressed. Having the visibility of an issue’s prior occurrence/nonoccurrence could speed up the resolution process in some cases. 
  3. Resource ownership of the CAPA – Advanced planning of who should own a CAPA and take it through to completion. Lack of traceability of updates to the ownership of CAPA.    

CAPA Process Improvements 

1. Traceability of your CAPAs 

Trace your CAPAs from their source to the resolution. Tracking every minute detail ensures that you can catch patterns and gaps proactively rather than after the damage is done. Paper-based processes might make it difficult to have this view but digital QMS allows you to link your CAPAs to the related items in the process. This ensures that whenever you look at a CAPA, you can instantly find answers to questions like

 

  • “Which non-conformance is related to this CAPA?” 
  • “Did this CAPA trigger any change requests?” 
  • “Is this CAPA related to any other quality issue that our organization might have seen in the past?” 
  • “Does this CAPA impact any documentation?” 
  • “Who is handling this CAPA?” 
  • “Who all signed off on this CAPA?” 

2. Risk Management through CAPA 

ISO 13485 and 14971 provide guidelines for the quality processes centered around risk management of the processes. Organizations have risk management plans which are designed after careful consideration of numerous factors such as potential hazards and their probability of occurrence, the magnitude of the harm that could be caused by the hazards, or if the risk level reaches an unacceptable level.

 

Integrating the corresponding risk parameters which are/could be impacted by a CAPA would enable a dynamic, up-to-date risk management plan that provides a strong base for the entire manufacturing process and would play a vital role in ensuring consistent high quality of the products.  

3. Cross-functional collaboration 

 CAPA is not always department-specific. Sometimes an issue impacts different departments. An issue might occur in a department, but its impact could be multi department. Resolution of such issues requires strong cross-functional collaboration and inter-department communication. There should be policies that guide teams to collaborate and work on CAPAs.

 

 Transparency and details which help the management understand ‘who the owner of the actions is’ is taken to resolve the CAPA. Which teams have collaborated on this to make it happen can help provide visibility of the issue lifecycle and highlight any potential gaps and improvement points. 

 

 Conclusion 

These CAPA Process improvements have been implemented in eQMS Software.Our regression testing and SMEs have observed a considerable decrease in the pain points due to the process improvements being included in the initial design of the CAPA Process

FAQ's

What is a CAPA in medical device?

CAPA (Corrective Action and Preventive Action), used only to address systemic quality issues in medical device companies.

What is CAPA in GMP?

Corrective action and Preventive action is good manufacturing practice process. Corrective measures are determined based on the root cause analysis to correct the non-conformity that occurred and take an effective preventive action to prevent its occurrences.  

 

What is CAPA in the pharma industry?

CAPA is a quality management process used in pharmaceutical industries. The process involves identifying and analyzing the problem’s root cause and then taking desirable corrective and preventive action to prevent the problem from recurrence.  

 CAPA is the collective process of Corrective Action, eliminating the cause of the problem or non-conformity and preventing its recurrence. Preventive action, eliminating the potential problem, defect, or non-conformity to prevent its occurrence. 

What is RCA and CAPA?

RCA is Root Cause Analysis, the most crucial step in the CAPA Process. When we encounter a problem or defect in the process, product, or function, we try to find its real cause to take necessary Corrective and Preventive Actions and ensure the problem does not recur.  

CAPA – Corrective Action and Preventive Action.  

When a problem occurs, correction is done to rectify the situation. Corrective action is the immediate action taken to resolve the issue. Corrective action is reactive. Preventive measure is to be aware of the potential problem and its real cause and take proactive action to prevent its recurrence.

What are the steps involved in the CAPA process?

A quality management CAPA process involves the following steps 

  • Identification – Identify the issue and raise a CAPA request  
  • Documentation – Document the information  
  • Investigation – Investigate the patterns, processes, and procedures failures associated with CAPA 
  • Root cause analysis – using the right tools, analyze and determine the root cause of the problem. 
  • Verification – Verify the Corrective actions and Preventive actions prescribed 
  • Implementation – Implement the action plan 
  • Effective check – Check for the implemented action plan effectiveness. 

What is the purpose of a CAPA?

The purpose of the CAPA process is to correct and prevent defects or issues within the company. Corrective action is determined based on the investigation process for the non-conformity that occurred. In contrast, by analyzing the risk threshold, preventive measure is planned to prevent the same problem or non-conformity in the future.

What should a CAPA include?

A CAPA process should include: 

  • Identifying and investigating existing and potential quality issues 
  • Identifying the actions needed to resolve and correct the problems and to prevent their recurrences 
  • Verifying the corrective actions implemented are effective 
  • Implementing changes in procedure 
  • Disseminating information about the quality problems 
  • Submitting the report for management review 

 

When should a CAPA be opened?

If you have an issue that proves to be repetitive and systemic, or if it is something that is quite severe.

How can I improve my CAPA process?

  •  To start with improving the CAPA process, organizations need to perform an in-depth analysis of the root cause to investigate the actual cause of the problem. To do so, identify the problem, define the issue that occurred, understand the sources, examine the process and identify the potential root cause.  
  • After investigating the root cause, get the stakeholders involved and document the investigative information to ensure the determined actions are implemented and executed for resolutions. 
  • Focus on Corrective action to eliminate the problem and Preventive measures to eradicate the same problem in the future. 
  • Adopt an automated quality management system to streamline the CAPA process and focus on the correct issues that matter most with the AI-enabled reports and stats. Also, keep track of the process progresses, saving resources and time.
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