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- Posts: 231
- Joined: Tue Feb 15, 2005 9:51 am
There is a new standard: ASTM E2500
to quote from the reference below
This standard proposes the almost complete destruction of the validation “Vâ€
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Discussions about HPLC, CE, TLC, SFC, and other "liquid phase" separation techniques.
Agreed, as an analytical chemist working in the GLP environment, until the GLP guidelines reference these Standards, things are unlikely to change. The FDA and EMEA may support these documents but, until they incorporate them into their guidelines, the status quo will remain.Adrian
I tend to agree with your take on it. I think instrument qualification is one area that the FDA has highly overkilled. Not only does it often take a long time to get an instrument running. But you can walk into almost any pharmaceutical lab and find an instrument sitting in the corner, never used, covered with dust: that is state of the art but cannot be qualified for one reason or another. So I've seen many cases where best available technology is not used as a result of these requirements.
However, to my knowledge the ASTM standards are not all that relevant for Pharmaceutical/GMP type work. It is the guidance documents, the USP, and the CFR (and industry standard practise) the govern what we do. So I don't imagine this new ASTM standard will change anything.
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