EBOOK THE BEGINNER S GUIDE TO DESIGN VERIFICATION AND DESIGN VALIDATION FOR MEDICAL DEVICES

Similar documents
FDA 483 The Definitive Guide to Responding to FDA 483 and Warning Letters

1.7 Limit of a Function

The 23 Point UX Design Checklist

THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT USER DOCUMENTATION DOCUMENTATION BEST PRACTICES

Anatomy of a Standard Transcript

Aren t computers wonderful? Well, they are when they work and do what

EPISODE 23: HOW TO GET STARTED WITH MAILCHIMP

Close Your File Template

Website Optimizer. Before we start building a website, it s good practice to think about the purpose, your target

Web Evaluation Report Guidelines

CHAPTER 18: CLIENT COMMUNICATION

It s possible to get your inbox to zero and keep it there, even if you get hundreds of s a day.

ABCs of Direct Mail. Tips for More Effective Marketing Publications

Kuratowski Notes , Fall 2005, Prof. Peter Shor Revised Fall 2007

Grab Your Hard Hat Ten Steps for Successful Web Site Construction

Scenarios, Storyboards, Wireframes, Critique. Jon Kolko Professor, Austin Center for Design

10 Tips For Effective Content

Problem Solving through Programming In C Prof. Anupam Basu Department of Computer Science & Engineering Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur

STAUNING Credit Application Internet Sales Process with /Voic Templates to Non-Responsive Prospects 2018 Edition

Module 6. Campaign Layering

How to Get Your Inbox to Zero Every Day

[Maria Jackson Hittle] Thanks, Michael. Since the RSR was implemented in 2009, HAB has been slowing shifting its focus from data submission to data

Virtualization: For Victory Over IT Complexity ABERDEEN GROUP

Animator Friendly Rigging Part 1

A Step by Step Guide to Postcard Marketing Success

Here s how this whole external IRB thing works: A handbook for external IRB submissions

Intro. Scheme Basics. scm> 5 5. scm>

EVALUATION ASSIGNMENT 2

Trombone players produce different pitches partly by varying the length of a tube.

If Statements, For Loops, Functions

Assignment #1: /Survey and Karel the Robot Karel problems due: 1:30pm on Friday, October 7th

Mehran Sahami Handout #7 CS 106A September 24, 2014

How to Create a Killer Resources Page (That's Crazy Profitable)

Reasons to NOT Use . for Urgent Messages. Steuart Snooks. CEO Solutions For Success

Dealer Reviews Best Practice Guide

Curtin University School of Design. Internet Usability Design 391. Chapter 1 Introduction to Usability Design. By Joel Day

Asking for information (with three complex questions, so four main paragraphs)

Speech 2 Part 2 Transcript: The role of DB2 in Web 2.0 and in the IOD World

Customizing DAZ Studio

LeakDAS Version 4 The Complete Guide

Computer Science 210 Data Structures Siena College Fall Topic Notes: Complexity and Asymptotic Analysis

Foundation Level Syllabus Usability Tester Sample Exam

Creating an Intranet using Lotus Web Content Management. Part 2 Project Planning

Stop Scope Creep. Double Your Profit & Remove The Stress of Selling Websites

Up and Running Software The Development Process

Defining Done in User Stories

OneNote: The Ultimate User Guide - How To Use Microsoft OneNote For Better Time Management And Improving Productivity

VIDEO 1: WHY SHOULD YOU USE TEMPLATES TO SEND YOUR S?

n! = 1 * 2 * 3 * 4 * * (n-1) * n

Proofwriting Checklist

What Are CSS and DHTML?

THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO CREATING PERSUASIVE OPT-IN FORMS

Software Engineering Lab Manual

This is a book about using Visual Basic for Applications (VBA), which is a

The Ultimate Guide. to creating persuasive Opt-in forms

Strategy. 1. You must do an internal needs analysis before looking at software or creating an ITT

List Building Starter Course. Lesson 2. Writing Your Campaign. Sean Mize

Discover How to Watch the Mass Ascension of the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta Even if You Can t Be There

Meet our Example Buyer Persona Adele Revella, CEO

Double Your Affiliate Commissions with this VERY Simple Strategy

How To Upload Your Newsletter

Justification for Names and Optional Parameters

ProServeIT Corporation Century Ave. Mississauga, ON L5N 6A4 T: TF: F: W: ProServeIT.

the magazine of the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association YEARS OF RESEARCH INTELLIGENCE A FUTURESPECTIVE

Karlen Communications Citations and Bibliography in Word. Karen McCall, M.Ed.

CITS5501 Software Testing and Quality Assurance Formal methods

How to Stop Wasting Money On Your Google AdWords Campaigns

Bruce Silver Associates Independent Expertise in BPM

MEAP Edition Manning Early Access Program Learn Windows Server in a Month of Lunches Version 5

Dealing with Bugs. Kenneth M. Anderson University of Colorado, Boulder CSCI 5828 Lecture 27 04/21/2009

Excel Basics: Working with Spreadsheets

Lesson4:CreatinganInterfaceandChecklistService

Dovetail. Order Express. The Newsletter. The kitchen is the heart of a home. Customize & Collaborate with Order Express

Guide to buying a better. build create

Samples of Features and Feature Stories CSc 190

Assignment #1: and Karel the Robot Karel problems due: 3:15pm on Friday, October 4th due: 11:59pm on Sunday, October 6th

the NXT-G programming environment

MicroSurvey Users: How to Report a Bug

E-COMMERCE HOMEPAGE UX DESIGN TIPS THESE TIPS WILL HELP YOU CREATE A USABLE E-COMMERCE WEBSITE AND TURN YOUR HOMEPAGE INTO A CONVERSION MAGNET

Digital Marketing Manager, Marketing Manager, Agency Owner. Bachelors in Marketing, Advertising, Communications, or equivalent experience

The exam. The exam. The exam 10. Sitting a City & Guilds online examination 11. Frequently asked questions 18. Exam content 20

Roc Model and Density Dependence, Part 1

(Refer Slide Time: 02.06)

Eric Kaplan Frontline Test Equipment

Datacenter Care HEWLETT PACKARD ENTERPRISE. Key drivers of an exceptional NPS score

Know Your Reader. What Users Want. What Users Want. The Next Level of Site Content

The Advantages of a ready-to-go Intranet

requirements of Section 10 of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and otherwise in accordance with applicable law.

Product Backlog Document Template and Example

Practical Object-Oriented Design in Ruby

Notes on Turing s Theorem and Computability

Binary, Hexadecimal and Octal number system

SOFTWARE ENGINEERING. Software Specification Software Design and Implementation Software Validation. Peter Mileff PhD

C Pointers 2013 Author Riko H i

Images help us relate to content, help us become involved. They help us to see ourselves in the science, rather than standing on the outskirts.

Deploy Registry Settings Office 2010 to be used as an internal resource only

TDDC88 Lab 4 Software Configuration Management

CTI-TC Working Session

Object-Oriented Analysis and Design Prof. Partha Pratim Das Department of Computer Science and Engineering Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur

Let s use a more formal definition. An angle is the union of two rays with a common end point.

Transcription:

EBOOK THE BEGINNER S GUIDE TO DESIGN VERIFICATION AND DESIGN VALIDATION FOR MEDICAL DEVICES JON SPEER, FOUNDER & VP OF QA/RA GREENLIGHT.GURU

THE BEGINNER S GUIDE TO DESIGN VERIFICATION AND DESIGN VALIDATION FOR MEDICAL DEVICES TABLE OF CONTENTS 2. The Beginner s Guide 4. Design Verification & Design Validation What? 6. Design Verification Is More Than Testing 8. Importance of a Design Verification Plan 11. Yes, Design Validation Planning Is Important WWW.GREENLIGHT.GURU

PAGE 2 THE BEGINNER S GUIDE TO DESIGN VERIFICATION AND DESIGN VALIDATION When your medical device product development project gets to Design Verification and Design Validation, do you feel like it s almost there? Meaning, finally, you can see the goal of market release coming soon? Or is it more like being stuck in the middle? From my product development experiences, entering into Design Verification and Design Validation is always bittersweet. Exciting because yes, to get to Design Verification means that we have accomplished quite a bit.

PAGE 3 Terrifying because the work ahead can be frustrating, time consuming, and sometimes ambiguous. Let me share a few perspectives from a recent project. Then I ll get into explaining exactly what Design Verification and Design Validation are, how they are the same, and how they are different. The device is an electronic medical device with firmware. Early design and development activities were trying. The team changed, the design changed. Lots of back and forth, with seemingly little to no progress at times. But then we found ourselves at the edge of Design Verification and preparing a 510(k) submission. As project manager, I realize getting to this point in the project is a significant milestone. But I m not a complacent person. The goal is market launch. And when you are about to enter into Design Verification and Design Validation, you quickly realize how important the earlier Design Controls activities are to your project. Did you capture the right User Needs? Are your Design Inputs written well-enough? Do you have sufficient Design Outputs? What happened during Design Reviews? Does the Design Plan specify enough detail (or too much detail)? WWW.GREENLIGHT.GURU

PAGE 4 So here we were, about to begin Design Verification. We had a loosely defined plan for all the Design Verification activities. And then we just dove right in. While we were addressing Design Verification, the startup CEO only heard that we were preparing the 510(k), which in his mind was more meaningful and significant. Should I have explained the importance of Design Verification and Design Validation to the CEO? Or was he right to focus on the 510(k)? Maybe it s a matter of semantics. Not sure it matters either way. Regardless, let s now get into the specifics of Design Verification and Design Validation that the startup CEO didn t want to. Let me dive into explaining what they are, how they are the same, and how they are different. DESIGN VERIFICATION & DESIGN VALIDATION WHAT? All too often in medical device product development, the terms verification and validation are thrown around. Many times they are lumped together as V&V as kind of one thing or phase. I m not here to debate whether this thinking is right or wrong.

PAGE 5 There are times when I see Design Verification as something very different from Design Validation. And plenty of other times when I refer to V&V. First, let s clear up a bit of terminology about verification and validation. These V words without descriptive adjectives are too vague. For instance, if someone asks you about verification, you need them to clarify what they mean. There are multiple types of verification and validation: Design, Process, and Software are the most common in the medical device industry. And each means something different. Also, to complicate matters a bit, outside the medical device industry, verification and validation also mean different things. The focus of this post and the relevant terms for Design Controls are Design Verification and Design Validation. I m only focusing on these versions for the time being. (So from this point forward in this post, if you read verification I m referring to Design Verification and validation refers to Design Validation.) Even with this Design Verification and Design Validation can be confusing. To help clarify, remember these two simple questions: Design Verification: Did you design the device right? Design Validation: Did you design the right device? Be sure to note the subtle, but extremely important, difference. WWW.GREENLIGHT.GURU

PAGE 6 DESIGN VERIFICATION IS MORE THAN TESTING I suspect when most medical device engineers hear the term Design Verification they think of one thing: testing. While it is true and very likely that Design Verification will involve testing, there are other acceptable verification activities. Design Verification activities can include tests, inspections, and analyses (for a full list, refer to FDA Design Control Guidance section Types of Verification Activities on page 30). The natural tendency and trap is to fallback and rely too heavily on testing for Design Verification. Don t fall into this. Design Verification activities include analysis and inspection

PAGE 7 Remember, the purpose of Design Verification is to confirm your Design Outputs meet your Design Inputs. This is why you have to think about Design Verification when defining Design Inputs. TESTING PITFALLS Design Verification testing has pitfalls. There are plenty of cases where inspection and analysis activities are just not sufficient for verification and testing is the only way. Keep in mind, though, that testing is often very expensive, time consuming, and subjective. Expensive because you usually have to have lots of test articles. Expensive because you may need to involve third party testing resources. Time consuming because testing multiple test articles, especially if third party testing firms are involved. Subjective because you may try to do the testing yourself to save money and time. But if you don t test to an accepted method or protocol, your tests are not objective. Again, there are plenty of times where testing is the only way to verify. My advice is to also consider other verification activities. WWW.GREENLIGHT.GURU

PAGE 8 Design Verification testing is often necessary IMPORTANCE OF A DESIGN VERIFICATION PLAN For the reasons described above, a Design Verification Plan is important. And the time to construct a verification plan is when you define Design Inputs. If you wait to construct a Design Verification plan right before starting verification, this is too late. This is why I stress over and over the importance of considering how you will verify Design Inputs when you are defining Design Inputs.

PAGE 9 Consider that instead of rushing to Design Verification, the opposite approach might be more beneficial. Spend more time defining Design Inputs so that Design Verification becomes smoother. Implementing this approach will help you to become a better Design Input artist and your ability to better manage medical device product development (click here to get my free 5 phase medical device product development checklist). DESIGN VALIDATION PROVES THE RIGHT DEVICE WAS DESIGNED The purpose of Design Validation shall prove the medical device meets the User Needs and intended uses. And Design Validation is a Design Controls activity that happens pretty late in the product development process. But yet validation is a measure of one of the first activities--defining User Needs. Design Validation Musts Design Validation must include initial production units. This means the medical devices used for validation have to be built in the production environment, using drawings, specifications, etc. (i.e. Design Outputs) by production personnel. WWW.GREENLIGHT.GURU

PAGE 10 Design Validation must involve clinical evaluation. This means that the end-user(s) should be involved and the device should be tested either under simulated use or actual use. The medical device should be used under the specific environmental conditions. Clinical evaluation does not just mean actual use. NOTE: Actual use requires quite a bit of additional criteria for most devices. You can t just go and have your medical device used in actual use without addressing this first. Clinical Evaluation can be simulated use

PAGE 11 Design Validation must involve testing. Tests are required to demonstrate your medical device functions as expected and meets the User Needs. You can also incorporate inspections and analyses as part of validation in addition to testing. Design Validation must include packaging and labeling. Your medical device includes everything from the label, the instructions for use, the packaging, and everything inside your packaging. Validation must include all of it. YES, DESIGN VALIDATION PLANNING IS IMPORTANT Like Design Verification, it is important to plan Design Validation and to do so earlier in the project. I advise planning validation at about the same time as Design Verification planning. There is a definite relationship between verification and validation. If planned properly, there are ways you can accomplish Design Verification and Design Validation with the same activities. Thinking about how you will validate a particular User Need can happen when these are defined. WWW.GREENLIGHT.GURU

PAGE 12 Design Validation, though, can be a bit tricky, especially in determining if you have effectively demonstrated your medical device meets User Needs. There is usually more of a human element to validation and subjectivity can be an issue. Plus, the ways you choose to solicit end-user feedback is important. Are you going to be present and observe the end-user? Are you going to send the medical device, complete with packaging, labeling, and IFU, to the end-user and require a survey be completed? How will you know you successfully completed Design Validation? These are all considerations of validation planning.

THE BEGINNER S GUIDE TO DESIGN VERIFICATION AND DESIGN VALIDATION FOR MEDICAL DEVICES 317-960-4220 WWW.GREENLIGHT.GURU