Devine Guidance
No Established Procedure for Servicing will Result in a Form 483 Observation!

For this week’s guidance, Dr. D will revisit the warning awarded an Arizona-based establishment in December of 2014. For those of you that had a chance to read the doctor’s rants from last week, the offending establishment received a warning letter from FDA that referenced no less than 10 Form 483 observations. As Dr. D mentioned last week, this establishment’s Chief Jailable Officer (CJO) and the quality/regulatory staff were clearly asleep at the proverbial wheel or woefully under-trained for this establishment to rack up so many observations and the subsequent receipt of a prized agency warning letter. It is Dr. D’s humble opinion, many of the observations noted could be categorized as basic Quality 101 requirements; therefore, no possible excuses for this type of systemic lapse in the Quality Management System (QMS) is acceptable.

One additional observation the doctor noted was for “Servicing” (Part 820.200); or should Dr. D say; “lack of an established approach.” Since this requirement is one of the less frequently cited Form 483 observations, the doctor is going to take the time and dive into this requirement for this week’s guidance. Because this establishment’s overall failure to comply with the FDA’s Quality System Regulation (QSR) can be categorized as “brobdingnagian” (look-it-up) proportions, Dr. D believes their returning to the good graces of the agency will be a significant challenge. The doctor hopes, they have the time, patience, and fiscal well-being, to be successful in their quest to achieve compliance with the QSR.

Warning Letter – 17 December 2014

Make no mistake, 10 Form 483 observations documented within a warning letter with many of the observations followed by the notation “your firm’s October 16, 2014 response is not adequate;” is not going to win any brownie points with FDA. In fact, it is probable going to ensure the agency takes a long-hard look at how this establishment corrects these deficiencies. For those of you that are not terribly familiar with the regulatory pain associated with a warning letter, correcting the deficiencies is only the tip of the proverbial iceberg. When an offending establishment is awarded the prized FDA Warning Letter, all bets are off in regards to receiving clearance and/or approvals for new products and the signing of Certificates for Foreign Governments needed to export products to markets outside of the United States. Simply stated, the FDA believes that offending establishments, on the receiving end of a warning letter, should refocus their priorities on remediating the quality issues versus worrying about filling the new product pipeline or driving sales for products introduced into commerce outside of the United States.

Warning letter excerpt

Observation Nine (9) – “Failure to establish procedures or instructions for performing servicing activities, as required by 21 CFR 820.200(a). For example, when asked by the investigator, you replied that your firm has not established procedures for performing servicing activities. During the course of the inspection, you provided Equipment Maintenance Procedure, Revision Level 001 to our investigator. Your firm provided this same procedure in your October 16, 2014 response. These procedures are not adequate, in that they do not appear to ensure the requirements of 21 CFR 820.200 are met.”

Subpart N – Servicing

Section 820.200 Servicing

“(a) Where servicing is a specified requirement, each manufacturer shall establish and maintain instructions and procedures for performing and verifying that the servicing meets the specified requirements.

(b) Each manufacturer shall analyze service reports with appropriate statistical methodology in accordance with 820.100.

(c) Each manufacturer who receives a service report that represents an event which must be reported to FDA under part 803 of this chapter shall automatically consider the report a complaint and shall process it in accordance with the requirements of 820.198.

(d) Service reports shall be documented and shall include:

  1. The name of the device serviced;
  2. Any device identification(s) and control number(s) used;
  3. The date of service;
  4. The individual(s) servicing the device;
  5. The service performed; and (6) The test and inspection data.”

Compliance for dummies

Obviously, if a device establishment is manufacturing single-use disposable medical devices such as urological drainage catheters or electrophysiological (EP) ablation catheters, these products do not typically have related servicing requirements. However, if the establishment is also selling the radio frequency generator needed to support the EP ablation catheter then Part 820.200 becomes a salient requirement for the establishment. The QSR is very clear about the requirements that device establishments are mandated to comply with and breaks down the requirements into four segments.

Takeaways

For this week’s guidance, Dr. D will leave the readers with just one takeaway. If your establishment is entering equipment into commerce that is deemed a finished medical device and product servicing is expected during the normal product life-cycle, then compliance with §820.200 is mandated by the QSR. Mandatory means “not optional” in the eyes of the regulatory gods at FDA. Failure to comply will result in a Form 483 observation being awarded during one of the agency’s friendly visit for a cup of coffee and an inspection.

In closing, thank you again for joining Dr. D and I hope you find value in the guidance provided. Until the next installment of DG – cheers from Dr. D. and best wishes for continued professional success.

References

  1. Code of Federal Regulation. (2014, April) Title 21 Part 820: Quality system regulation. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  2. Devine, C. (2011). Devine guidance for complying with the FDA’s quality system regulation – 21 CFR, Part 820. Charleston, SC: Amazon.
  3. Devine, C. (2013). Devine guidance for managing key attributes of a FDA-compliant quality management system – 21 CFR, Part 820 Compliance. Charleston, SC: Amazon. FDA’s enforcement page. (2014, December). FDA.gov Website. Retrieved January 31, 2015, from http://www.fda.gov/ICECI/EnforcementActions/WarningLetters/ucm429201.htm.

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