Lean Validation: Why It’s Important and How to Achieve It

Validation impacts many critical aspects of your business from productivity to compliance to patient safety to product quality. It’s not enough, however, to have an effective validation process. To remain competitive and prepare your business for the future, you need an optimised validation process. This means lean validation.

A lean validation approach delivers everything you need from a validation process, but it achieves it as efficiently as possible.

This will save you money over the medium-to-long-term, although lean validation is about much more than this. It’s also about improving and enhancing your manufacturing, quality control, compliance, and product development processes overall.

The Problem with Validation

Validation is about ensuring your facility manufactures products of consistent quality while also providing documented evidence of this quality. It is also about ensuring systems (processes, equipment, machines) perform as per specification at each stage of the manufacturing process. Providing documentary evidence to prove this is also important.

The validation process is essential for product quality, compliance, and patient safety reasons, among others.

However, validation can be a long, drawn out, time-consuming, and inefficient process. This particularly applies when validation processes and systems are paper-based.

That said, validation can also be inefficient when all or part of the process is digitised, including when elements of validation are automated.

When validation is not efficient, your costs increase. It can also take longer to get products to market and it can reduce your competitiveness. It can also cause compliance issues in your business.

The solution is lean validation.

Lean validation makes the process of validating your manufacturing processes as efficient as possible, saving you time and money.

What is Lean Validation?

Lean validation is about eliminating waste at all stages of the validation process. This makes the validation effort more efficient while also achieving your goals as a manufacturer in a highly regulated industry. Those goals include:

  • Establishing effective and efficient data collection and document control systems
  • Optimising quality and patient safety
  • Reducing risk in the manufacturing process
  • Ensuring your processes and products comply with regulations
  • Ensuring you have documentary evidence that you are in compliance with all regulations
  • Reducing waste throughout the manufacturing process
  • Exceeding GAMP 5 standards

How to Achieve Lean Validation

Lean validation doesn’t happen by accident. Instead, it requires participation from everyone involved as well as ongoing effort. This includes:

  • A strategic, high-level approach to validation where the goal is not just successful validation, but successful validation achieved as efficiently as possible
  • Buy-in from all those involved and accepting that, just because things have always been done this way, doesn’t mean they should be done like that in the future.
  • A focus on value throughout the validation process, i.e. questioning each step, process, action, or decision and asking if it adds value to the validation effort. The aim is to reduce or eliminate anything that doesn’t add value to the validation process. Examples of this include tests that don’t add value and testing duplication.

 

Making Lean Validation Work

 

Lean Validation in Practice

While each validation project is different, there are a number of best practices that are essential in most lean validation processes. Some examples include:

  • Class-based design or class-based programming – using this object-oriented programming approach to software development eliminates duplication, speeds up testing, and reduces the time it takes to develop code
  • Equivalency – identifying where equivalence occurs in processes, machines, and equipment to reduce duplication of effort
  • Build in quality – building in quality from the beginning will help reduce waste by, for example, creating repeatable validation processes
  • Automate – automating as much of the validation process as possible particularly data creation, storage, removal, and retrieval
  • Digitise processes – a good example is approval processes as they often present bottlenecks in validation. Digitising approvals will deliver efficiency savings.
  • Paperless systems – the use of validated paperless systems to reduce the potential for document loss and/or rework

Adapting and customising any validation process to ensure it meets the needs of your business is essential. However, a lean validation approach should always be central to the effort.

Comments are closed.