Case Study: OOS Investigation – Tablet Dissolution

📝 Case Study: OOS Investigation – Tablet Dissolution
📍 Background
A marketed immediate-release tablet showed dissolution failure during routine quality control testing.
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Specification: NLT (Not Less Than) 80% drug release in 30 minutes.
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Observed result: 60–65% release in multiple tablets.
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Immediate assumption: possible analyst error or instrumental issue.
🔎 Investigation Process (as per FDA Guidance on OOS and ICH Q7/Q10)
1. Phase I – Laboratory Investigation
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Checks performed:
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Calibration of dissolution apparatus (RPM, temperature, basket/paddle alignment).
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Medium preparation (pH, volume, deaeration).
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Analyst competency review.
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Chromatography/data integrity review.
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Findings:
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All instruments were calibrated and working properly.
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No analyst errors or deviations in procedure.
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OOS confirmed by retesting (per protocol).
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✅ Conclusion: Lab error ruled out → move to Phase II.
2. Phase II – Full-Scale Investigation
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Cross-functional team: QA, QC, Production, and R&D involved.
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Batch review:
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Batch Manufacturing Record (BMR) checked for deviations.
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In-process controls (granule moisture content, compression force, hardness, friability).
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Environmental conditions during compression.
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Key Observations:
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Tablets had higher hardness than specified.
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Granulation parameters (binder solution volume and mixing time) deviated slightly during compression shift.
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Harder tablets slowed the disintegration and drug release.
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✅ Root Cause Identified: Improper granulation parameters → excessive tablet hardness → dissolution failure.
3. Risk Assessment
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Stability batches checked → borderline dissolution results.
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Market complaint history reviewed → no patient complaints yet.
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Regulatory risk: Since batch was already released, QA initiated recall decision assessment.
4. Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPA)
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Immediate CAPA (Corrective):
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Batch was rejected (if not released) OR subjected to regulatory reporting (if already in market).
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Investigation report documented as per OOS SOP.
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Preventive Actions:
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Updated granulation SOP with tighter control ranges.
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Introduced in-process tablet hardness monitoring during compression.
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Conducted operator retraining on granulation and compression parameters.
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Implemented QbD approach for critical quality attributes (CQA: dissolution, hardness).
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📊 Outcome
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Future batches met dissolution criteria.
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No recurrence reported in subsequent annual product reviews (APR/PQR).
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Company avoided potential warning letter by demonstrating robust investigation + CAPA.
📚 Key Learnings
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OOS investigations must follow a scientific and phased approach — never assume lab error without proof.
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True root cause often lies in manufacturing processes, not testing.
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Cross-functional collaboration (QC + Production + QA) is essential.
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Regulatory bodies expect documented evidence of root cause, risk assessment, and CAPA.
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QbD and PAT tools (Process Analytical Technology) can help prevent such issues.