Software helps SmithKline gain compliance

New software helps SmithKline Beecham comply with FDA GMPs for creating and disseminating packaging specifications. Software permits validation of packaging spec dissemination process, virtually eliminating exposure to compliance violations. Part one of two.

Packaging specs such as this one, including container drawings from vendors, are maintained and accessed electronically by those
Packaging specs such as this one, including container drawings from vendors, are maintained and accessed electronically by those

Corporate packaging departments in all industries face a daily battle to establish and disseminate packaging material specs rapidly and consistently to all in the company who need them. A packaging specification is a written document and/or a drawing that clearly identifies the dimensions, volume, material and other aspects of a packaging material or container.

In the pharmaceutical industry, however, it's more than just an inconvenience when different versions of a spec are circulating. That can cause hefty fines from FDA if the offending firm is caught.

For example, someone in purchasing might order a quantity of closures from a vendor using, say, version four of a spec that specifies that the foil induction seal liners inside the caps be unprinted. But a quality assurance inspector in the very same plant may have version five of that same spec-the latest-and it may require that the liner be printed with "Sealed for your protection."

If FDA inspectors were to come into the plant and find such a discrepancy, "that is a serious GMP violation," according to Tom Pack, packaging design development project manager at SmithKline Beecham. While the offense may seem minor, it's the principle-inconsistent paperwork-that's important.

And at SB, that was precisely the problem. The package engineering department would print out hard copy specs and distribute them by fax then mail to quality assurance and purchasing personnel at each plant, where they'd be kept on file. Regulatory, R&D and other departments also received hard copies for their files. But with specs maintained as paper documents stored in filing cabinets in office corners all across the corporation, there was no way to ever guarantee that plants would have the latest specs. That left the company open to the ongoing possibility of compliance headaches, something SB sought to reduce.

That's why the firm began a test of electronic document management software to create, manage and distribute SB's packaging specifications from its Philadelphia, PA, headquarters to its North American plants. In four years, SB has evolved the system into what it is today, a comprehensive system that maintains about 5ꯠ documents. The specs are contained in word processing documents for bottles, closures, labels and leaflets, plus other components. In addition, CAD drawings of containers and other molded parts are in the system. (Label copy and art aren't included in the system because they're handled via a different system in the company.) The software, called NovaManage(TM) from NovaSoft® (Burlington, MA) resides along with the data on its own dedicated computer, called a server, in Philadelphia.

How it works

When specs need changing or new ones must be created, the package engineering department at SB's headquarters access NovaManage to make the changes (see sidebar, opposite page, for details). Then, designated personnel at each plant-currently quality assurance and purchasing people-have access to the same system via the company's wide-area network (WAN). A WAN links together a company's various offices and plants via dedicated high-speed data communications links.

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