Not to hijack the thread, but I'd like to hear estimates of how many man-hours others estimate that a methods validation takes.
We formerly wrote a report after completing the validation, figuring that we had documented the project. However in recent years our QA arm has increased its staffing, and now requires a pre-validation protocol report, although they cannot show me where in the regulations that is required. And then a finished report as well. And they wanted that in their special font, and made a special template (probably from one's former employer), but we fought that, and told them we needed to have that report available to all our R&D, and won. I wish we were staffed half as well as they are !!!
As to Liv - you'll find there are NUMEROUS gray areas, and you'll just have to use your best judgement. I personally find forced degradation in the specificity part as the hardest, and we do obtain columns of three different lots of packings if available, so there's a hardware cost as well. We automate tests such as flow rate changes, mobile phase changes, temperature changes, and use few samples with those. we try to use a second system if we have one. We're hoping our QA understands new USP <1226> about applying compendial test methods to finished products, thus requiring only verification, not validation. They claimed for over a year that they hadn't heard of <1226>, but I had - apparently they never read journals like LC-GC Magazine, where I saw that. Don't get me started....