Q. How should a company approach handling an FDA-483 observation with which they do not agree?
A. The best approach to deal with an observation with which a company does not agree is to prevent an FDA-483 observation in
the first place.
During the course of an FDA inspection, there will be many opportunities to ascertain the areas of interest and potential
areas of concern of the investigator. The clearest opportunity to understand the true concerns of the investigator will be
during the periodic wrap-up sessions, which should occur on a daily basis per Investigations Operations Manual (IOM) Section 5.2.3: "... investigators and analysts should make every reasonable effort to discuss all observations with
the management of the establishment as they are observed, or on a daily basis, to minimize surprises, errors, and misunderstandings
when the FDA 483 is issued..." (1).
FDA investigators are human beings just like the rest of us and mistakes or misunderstanding can happen. The agency encourages
the industry to use these communication opportunities to ask questions or request clarification, and if during the course
of these communication opportunities it becomes apparent that there is an area of misinterpretation or misunderstanding, additional
information or documentation should be presented quickly and clearly. It is highly encouraged that a professional posture
be maintained, even when a company does not agree with the investigator. It is better for both the company and for FDA if
any and all observations on the FDA-483 are understood, are factually accurate, and are grounded in law or regulation.
The ability to take prompt corrective action is another advantage of having periodic discussions during the inspection. While
corrective action may not prevent an FDA-483 observation, it will mitigate the impact and demonstrate to the agency how the
executive management is committed to compliance. Any corrective actions taken in response to a potential FDA-483 observation
should be comprehensive in scope and should address the underlying system problem. The FDA-483 is not a final agency action
and does not represent an agency level position. It is a list of objectionable conditions observed by the investigator(s)
during the course of the inspection which are, in the investigator's judgment, conditions or practices that may indicate that
a drug has been adulterated (see IOM Section 5.2.3 and 5.2.7). The investigator owns the FDA-483; once issued, it would be
a very rare exception to the rule to have it revised and reissued. In fact, the IOM limits such conditions to errors discovered
prior to leaving the facility and errors discovered after leaving the facility (see IOM, Section 5.2.3.1.6). The only real
fruitful areas of discourse are, therefore, factual inaccuracy and observations that do not accurately represent violations
of law or regulation.
Once the FDA-483 is issued, the best opportunity to deal with an observation with which you do not agree (and which contains
a factual inaccuracy or does not accurately represent violations of law/regulation) is within the FDA-483 response, which
should be submitted within 15 days of the conclusion of the inspection. It is perfectly appropriate to present information
and evidence in an FDA-483 response that repeats, and augments as appropriate, that which was provided during the inspection
in addition to completely addressing all other observations, including those presented verbally by the investigator.
If all efforts undertaken do not achieve the desired result, keep in mind that it is only after further agency review that
the objectionable conditions listed on the FDA-483 may be considered to be violations of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
or other statutes (see IOM Section 5.2.7) and, therefore, subject to consideration for regulatory action.
Reference
1. FDA, Investigations Operations Manual, 2012,
http://www.fda.gov/ICECI/Inspections/IOM/default.htm.