Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to main navigation

FDA Guidance: Alternative Tools for Site Assessments

The FDA has issued guidance on how alternative tools can be used alongside or instead of traditional on-site inspections to assess manufacturing facilities named in pending applications. 

The goal is a risk-based, flexible, and timely evaluation of production sites. FDA decides case by case whether alternative tools are sufficient or an on-site inspection is required. The guidance does not apply to other drug inspection programs (e.g. postapproval inspections or surveillance inspections).

Which tools are available?

  • Remote Regulatory Assessments (RRA):
    • Records requests under §704(a)(4) FD&C Act (e.g., validation reports, deviations, test results, complaints).
    • Remote Interactive Evaluations (RIE): Livestream video, screen sharing, teleconferences.
  • Collaboration with foreign regulators:
    • Use of inspection reports from trusted partners (EU, UK, Switzerland, MRA partners).
    • Joint inspections: local lead inspector with FDA participating remotely.
  • Remote Subject Matter Experts (SMEs):
    • FDA experts virtually support on-site inspection teams when specialized knowledge is needed.

Applied especially when:

  • Facilities have a strong inspection track record (FDA or MRA partner),
  • Products are urgently needed (e.g., shortages, public health needs),
  • On-site inspections are not feasible (travel restrictions, pandemics, natural disasters).

Advantages of alternative tools:

  • Speed: Supports timely decision-making and meeting PDUFA/BsUFA deadlines.
  • Flexibility: FDA can maintain oversight even when travel is restricted.
  • Risk focus: Resources concentrated on high-risk facilities or processes.
  • Global harmonization: Reliance on partner inspections reduces duplication and accelerates approvals across markets.
  • Efficiency: Remote SMEs provide expertise without requiring travel.

Source:

FDA: FDA Guidance Documents - Alternative Tools: Assessing Drug Manufacturing Facilities Identified in Pending Applications


Meet the GMP Compliance Adviser

The GMP Compliance Adviser is the world's largest knowledge portal for quality management in the pharma business. 

The demo access is non-binding and ends automatically.

Test it now for free

You may also be interested in the following articles:

The ABC of User Requirements Specification (URS)

The ABC of User Requirements Specification (URS)

In the URS, the future user defines what the system should be capable of, but also what it is limited to. In addition to the (testable!) technical requirements, regulatory require-ments should also be taken into account.
Read more
What is the Importance of Data Integrity?

What is the Importance of Data Integrity?

Here's the answer:
Read more
EDQM: Updated Guideline on CEP Revisions and Renewals

EDQM: Updated Guideline on CEP Revisions and Renewals

The European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines & HealthCare has published a revised version of its guideline on the revision and renewal of Certificates of Suitability (CEPs) (PA/PH/CEP (04) 02), aligning it with recent EU legislation on variation procedures.
Read more
EMA: Public Consultation of Annexes to ICH Q3C and VICH GL18 on Residual Solvents

EMA: Public Consultation of Annexes to ICH Q3C and VICH GL18 on Residual Solvents

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has published revised annexes to the ICH Q3C guideline (“Impurities: Guideline for Residual Solvents”) and the corresponding veterinary guideline VICH GL18 for public consultation. The commenting period is open until the end of June 2026.
Read more
FDA: New Draft Guidance on Impurity Specifications for Antibiotics

FDA: New Draft Guidance on Impurity Specifications for Antibiotics

The US FDA has issued a new draft guidance (April 2026) on Impurity Specifications for Antibiotics.
Read more
EDQM: Guidance on Traceability of Medicines in Hospitals

EDQM: Guidance on Traceability of Medicines in Hospitals

The EDQM has published new guidance on the traceability of medicines in hospital settings. The aim is to improve traceability up to the point of administration and strengthen patient safety.
Read more
Previous
Next