ISO 13485
- Medical Devices - Quality Management System
ISO 13485:2003 - Medical devices
-- Quality management systems --
Requirements for regulatory
purposes specifies requirements
for a quality management system
where an organization needs to
demonstrate its ability to
provide medical devices and
related services that
consistently meet customer
requirements and regulatory
requirements applicable to
medical devices and related
services.
The primary objective of ISO
13485:2003 is to facilitate
harmonized medical device
regulatory requirements for
quality management systems. As a
result, it includes some
particular requirements for
medical devices and excludes
some of the requirements of ISO
9001 that are not appropriate as
regulatory requirements. Because
of these exclusions,
organizations whose quality
management systems conform to
this International Standard
cannot claim conformity to ISO
9001 unless their quality
management systems conform to
all the requirements of ISO
9001.
All requirements of ISO
13485:2003 are specific to
organizations providing medical
devices, regardless of the type
or size of the organization.
If regulatory requirements
permit exclusions of design and
development controls, this can
be used as a justification for
their exclusion from the quality
management system. These
regulations can provide
alternative arrangements that
are to be addressed in the
quality management system. It is
the responsibility of the
organization to ensure that
claims of conformity with ISO
13485:2003 reflect exclusion of
design and development controls.
ISO-13485:2003 basically
consists of:
1) certain ISO-9001 requirements
and
2) newly defined requirements
catering specifically to the
medical device industry.
As such, ISO-13485 differs from
ISO-9001 in certain ways,
modifying or even excluding some
of the latter's requirements.
For instance, the ISO-13485
excludes the ISO-9001's
requirements related to
continual improvement because
most medical device regulations
require organizations to
maintain their quality
management systems, and not to
improve on them. Thus, while
ISO-9001emphasizes the
importance of improving quality
systems, ISO-13485 emphasizes
the importance of maintaining
them. ISO-9001 customer
satisfaction requirements were
also excluded because some of
the committee members who worked
on ISO-13485 found them to be
too subjective.
Some key points adopted by
the ISO-13485 include:
1) focus on meeting regulatory
requirements;
2) focus on meeting customer
requirements;
3) use of a 'process' approach;
4) maintenance of the
effectiveness of quality
management systems; and
5) maintenance of procedural
documentation.
As mentioned, the ISO-13485 has
special requirements that are
not covered by ISO-9001:2008.
These special requirements
include both documentation and
system/process requirements that
cater to the medical device
industry.
Aside from
regulation-required documents,
additional documentations
required by ISO-13485 include
those pertaining to:
1) responsibilities and
authorities;
2) training procedures;
3) health, cleanliness, and
clothing;
4)
environmental conditions;
5)
control of contaminated
products;
6)
risk management;
7)
customer requirements;
8)
design and development;
9)
purchasing control, including
purchase traceability and
verification;
10)
reference materials;
11)
labeling and packaging;
12)
installation and verification;
13)
sterilization process
validation;
14)
preservation of product
(including shelf life); and
15)
measurement and monitoring.
Special system/process
requirements of the ISO-13485
include:
1) risk management systems;
2) clinical evaluations and
trials;
3) product cleanliness and
contamination controls;
4) requirements for implantable
devices;
5) proper communication of
advisory notices; and
6) additional research and
development requirements.
Difference between ISO 9001 and
ISO 13485
Some of the specific
requirements of ISO 13485 are
discussed below. The focus is on
the differences between ISO 9001
and ISO 13485. Please check the
standard for the exact language
and requirements. The standard
emphasizes the exact differences
within the text of the
publication.
In ISO 13485 there is a change
in emphasis from "improving" the
effectiveness of the quality
system to "maintaining" the
effectiveness and on meeting
customer and regulatory
requirements versus increasing
customer satisfaction. There is
more documentation required in
ISO 13485 also.
-
The additional required
documentation includes:
-
Those documents required by
regulation
-
Responsibility and authority
-
Training procedure, if required
-
Maintenance requirements
-
Health, cleanliness, clothing
-
Environmental conditions
-
Control of contaminated product
- Risk
management
-
Customer requirements
-
Design and development
-
Purchasing process including
traceability records and records
of verification
-
Reference materials and
reference measurement procedures
-
Labeling and packaging
-
Installation and verification
-
Sterilization process validation
-
Identification and validation
-
Preserving product including
shelf life
-
Monitoring, measurement and
measuring devices
-
Sterilization records, servicing
records, batch records,
validation
Differences in design and
development activities:
- Determine design transfer
activities
- Document design planning
outputs
- Include risk management in
input
- Approve inputs
- Document design outputs
- Include specialist as needed
in design review
- Complete validation before
delivery
- Include clinical trial as
required
Many people in the medical
device industry do not know much
more about quality systems than
that they are required. This
article provides an overview of
medical device quality systems
and then describes generally the
requirements of the ISO 13485
international standard for
medical devices quality
management systems (QMS).
Medical devices can be simple or
complex, but all of these can
benefit from being designed and
manufactured under ISO
13485:2003 which is the most
widely used medical device QMS
standard. It is required in
Europe, Canada and many other
countries for most devices. In
the US the FDA Quality System
Regulation (QS Reg.), also known
as the cGMP, is required.
Although the QS Reg. is
structured very differently than
ISO 13485, they have no
conflicting requirement
ISO 13485 is a regulatory
standard whose focus is meeting
customer requirements, including
regulatory requirements, and
maintaining the effectiveness of
the QMS.
ISO 13485 is a regulatory
standard whose focus is meeting
customer requirements, including
regulatory requirements, and
maintaining the effectiveness of
the QMS. This differs from ISO
9001:2008 which focuses on
customer satisfaction and
continual improvement. Whereas
both customer satisfaction and
continual improvement are as
important to medical device
manufacturers as to any other
business today, these things are
hard to measure and tend to be
somewhat subjective. So when it
came time to adapt ISO 9001:2008
to the medical device industry,
these potentially subjective
requirements were changed to
meeting customer requirements
and maintaining the
effectiveness of the QMS, which
are more easily measureable. The
other major difference from ISO
9001, which is also consistent
with the fact that this is a
regulatory standard, is that
there are more requirements for
documented procedures. In ISO
13485, meeting requirements
includes meeting regulatory
requirements. So for devices
that will be used in the US, to
be compliant with ISO 13485,
manufacturers must also meet the
QS Reg. As a regulation the QS
Reg. is often more specific than
ISO 13485, particularly in the
areas of complaint handling,
labeling control, and
documentation. ISO 13485 is
structured the same way as ISO
9001:2008, and is in fact about
90 % the same as this general
standard for quality management
systems. The reason for the
differences between ISO 13485,
ISO 9001 and the FDA QS reg.,
can be understood by looking at
the differences in their
objectives as given
below.
Comparison of Various QMS
Objectives
Objective of ISO 13485:2003
- To set out requirements for a
QMS that is capable of
consistently meeting customer
requirements, including
regulatory requirements.
Objective of ISO 9001:2008
- To set out requirements for a
voluntary, generic QMS that is
capable of meeting customer &
regulatory requirements, and
enhancing customer satisfaction
through process including
continual improvement.
Objective of the FDA Quality
System Regulation
- To set out requirements for a
QMS that is capable of
consistently providing safe and
effective medical devices.
A good QMS, if integrated into
the goals and management of a
company, provides a way to
reduce variation. Reducing
variation can provide financial
benefits for the company, such
as reduced scrap and general
process efficiencies. So in
addition to being a regulatory
requirement, a well-functioning
QMS makes good sense from a
business and financial
perspective. ISO 13485 follows
the process approach introduced
in ISO 9001:2008. The process
approach treats the QMS as a set
of interrelated processes
covering not only the
manufacture of a product or
provision of a service, but also
management processes and support
processes. A "process" is
something that transforms a
collection of inputs into
outputs. Inputs consist of
everything needed to accomplish
this transformation. For
manufacturing a device these
this might included such things
as raw materials, manufacturing
supplies, work benches, cleaning
materials, tools, and equipment,
the building, people, written
instructions, assembly drawings,
comparison samples, and
workmanship standards. The
output of the process, that is
the transformation of these
inputs, produces the finished
part, records about what was
done by who, and information
about how the transformation was
accomplished, such as time to
complete or production yield.
Unwanted outputs might include
scrap parts and wasted material.
For non-manufacturing processes,
for example Document Control,
inputs might include Document
Control procedure, change
request, people, equipment (copy
machine, computer, scanner),
document control center, and the
outputs would included
controlled documents, controlled
copies, and process statistics.
As you can see from even just
these two examples, the output
of one process, i.e. Document
control, is the input to other
processes, such as
manufacturing. Below figure
gives a diagram of how the ISO
13485 standard is organized.
Sections 1 to 3 are introductory
sections that describe the
purpose and use of the standard,
followed by sections 4-8 that
contain requirements that must
be fulfilled in order to be
compliant with the standard.

ISO 13485 Section 4 gives the
general requirements. These
include identifying specific
processes and how they interact,
and responsibility for processes
that are outsourced. A quality
manual, quality policy and
objectives and the requirements
for control of documents and
records and for outlining the
company's document structure are
given in Section 4. Document
control includes review and
approval of documents before
use, control of changes, and
making sure that current
versions of controlled documents
are available where needed for
use. Requirements for control of
records include maintaining
their integrity and establishing
procedures for how long
documents and records are
maintained.
The management of a company must
take an active part in the
establishment and maintenance of
an ISO 13485 QMS. Section 5
requires management involvement
at the level of the person who
makes policy and financial
decisions. This is usually
either the CEO or the chief of
operations. Establishing the
quality policy and objectives,
support and oversight of the QMS
and provision of resources are
the direct responsibility of
upper management. In addition,
top management appoints a
Management Representative,
usually the most senior quality
manager, who has the day-to-day
responsibility for the
functioning of the QMS. Upper
management's commitment must
also include quality planning,
and making sure that the quality
policy is understood at every
level of the organization.
There are specific requirements
for the periodic management
review of the QMS. This
specifies the minimum of what
must be covered in these
reviews, as well as the output
requirements. This is one of the
most important processes for a
QMS, and also adds value to the
company by providing a
structured framework managing
for quality and productivity.
Section 6 contains requirements
for provision of resources.
Management must assure adequate
facilities including, space,
tools, and equipment, including
computer systems. The building
environment must fit the devices
being made, including where
necessary, such environments as
clean rooms. Buildings, tools
and equipment must be maintained
in order to produce devices
meeting all their requirements.
The QMS must have as process to
insure that all required
maintenance activities are
preformed.
Human resources are essential to
quality medical devices.
Therefore the provision of and
adequate number of people that
are competent, capable, and
aware of their job
responsibilities is key. It is
not sufficient to train
personnel and keep good training
records, although that is
important. Management must first
define job requirements, often
in the quality manual and
positions descriptions. The QMS
must then document that
employees meet these
requirements, or have had
training to fill in any gaps.
Ongoing employee awareness of
QMS requirements, particularly
related to documents and
recordkeeping is the
responsibility of management.
Employees must also have
awareness of their job
responsibilities, including
their responsibilities for
product quality. They must know
the consequences to the product
or to the people using the
product, if they fail to do
their job properly.
The portion of the standard that
most effects what people in the
company do on a day-to-day basis
is section 7, with the unusual
name of "Product Realization."
This covers much more than
manufacturing. It does in fact
cover everything that is
required to realize a product,
from customer requirements to
creating (designing and
manufacturing), installing and
supporting a medical device.
Planning is an essential part of
a functioning QMS, and in
planning for product realization
the company is required to
establish processes for all
phases of product realization,
from how they obtain customer
requirements, design products,
purchase supplies and materials,
make, install and service a
device. There is risk associated
with everything that we do, but
in making medical devices these
can include the risk to a
person's life. Therefore ISO
13485 requires that "The
organization shall establish
documented requirements for risk
management throughout product
realization." Risk management
includes the following:
- Risk
Assessment - Identifying risks
- Risk
Analysis - looking at severity
and probability of all hazardous
situations
- Risk
Reduction - reduction,
mitigation (labeling),
elimination of risk as much as
possible or practical
Risk management applies to
processes, including all QMS
processes. However, most
importantly it applies to device
design, manufacturing and
support processes. This is such
an important process that ISO
13485 requires that risk
management be done according ISO
14971, the international
standard for medical device risk
management.
Planning for product realization
begins with establishing
processes for handling customer
requirements, and how to
communicate with the customer
throughout the lifecycle of the
device. Requirements may be as
simple as processing orders from
the company's catalog, to as
complex as requirements to
design a complex device from a
general concept. Communication
includes back and forth
communication with the customer
on requirements changes, and way
of collecting customer feedback
on all aspects of the device and
the manufacturer's business
processes.
If a company does product or
process design, they must follow
the requirements for design
controls given in ISO 13485.
When governments and regulatory
agencies looked at reported
adverse events of medical
devices, they found that as
often as not the problems were
caused by poor design. So having
a controlled design process that
includes risk management,
verification, validation and
controlled transfer of a design
to manufacturing can reduce the
potential for adverse effects. A
product development process
following the design control
requirements begins with
establishing design
requirements, and goes through
validation and transfer to
manufacturing, as outlined in
below.
Design Control
- Design and development
planning
- Design Input
- Risk Management
- Design Output
- Design Review
- Design Verification
- Design Validation
- Design Transfer
- Design Changes
- Design History File (DHF)
Once there is a device design
with established manufacturing
processes, it is important to
make sure that the materials
going into and used in making
the device are correct. ISO
13485 purchasing requirements
cover purchasing from qualified
suppliers, according to
pre-established specifications,
and assuring that purchased
product meets those
specifications.
Manufacturing or production
processes must be controlled to
assure that the manufactured
device meets all of its
specifications. This includes
not only controlling the
production processes, but
control of how material and
devices are identified, stored
and used. Documented processes
must cover receiving, warehouse,
production, testing, shipping,
installation and servicing. Some
of these processes cannot or
cannot economically be fully
tested to assure that all
product specifications are met.
Processes that cannot or will
not be fully verified must be
validated to assure that they
always meet specifications, and
once validated must be
controlled and performed by
trained personnel.
One of the ways to insure that a
product meets its specifications
involves the use of monitoring
and measuring equipment. This
equipment must be controlled to
assure that it gives accurate
results. A calibration and
preventive maintenance program
is essential to this control.
The last section of ISO 13485 is
the one that provides the
feedback and other information
that allows management to
maintain the effectiveness of
the QMS and includes:
-
Feedback including Customer
Complaints and handling adverse
events
-
Internal audit
-
Monitoring and measurement of
processes
-
Monitoring and measurement of
product including nonconforming
product
-
Analysis of data
-
Corrective and preventive action
A corrective action is one that
fixes the root cause of a
problem that has happened. This
is often confused with fixing a
problem that exists. Just fixing
a problem is not sufficient. A
root cause analysis that can be
as simple as asking "WHY" five
times, is not only essential to
a corrective action system, but
to the effectiveness of the
entire QMS. Preventive action,
on the other hand, is a system
that if used successfully will
provide one of the largest
financial benefits of the QMS.
Preventive actions are taken to
prevent nonconformities by
fixing things that might go
wrong.
Implementing
ISO 13485
There are key steps that every
company implementing a QMS will
need to consider:
Purchase the Standard
Before you can begin preparing
for your application, you will
require a copy of the standard.
You should read this and make
yourself familiar with it.
Review support literature and
software
There are a wide range of
quality publications and
software tools designed to help
you understand, implement and
become registered to a quality
management system.
Assemble a team and agree on
your strategy
You should begin the entire
implementation process by
preparing your organizational
strategy with top management.
Responsibility for a QMS lies
with Senior Management,
therefore it is vital that
Senior Management is involved
from the beginning of the
process.
Consider Training
Whether you are the Quality
Manager seeking to implement a
quality management system or a
Senior Manager who would like to
increase your general awareness
of ISO 14971,
Risk Management etc there are a
range of workshops, seminars and
training courses available.
Review Consultancy Options
The consultancy is the 3rd party
like NUCLEUS, You can receive
advice from independent
consultants on how best to
implement your quality
management system. They will
have the experience in
implementing a QMS and can
ensure you avoid costly
mistakes.
Choose a registrar
The registrar is the 3rd party,
like (Check
with International Accreditation
Forum for the accredited
certification body)
who come and assess the
effectiveness of your quality
management system, and issue a
certificate if it meets the
requirements of the standard.
Choosing a registrar can be a
complex issue as there are so
many operating in the market.
Factors to consider include
industry experience, geographic
coverage, price and service
level offered. The key is to
find the registrar who can best
meet your requirements. A great
place to start is by contacting
us.
Develop a Quality manual
A Quality manual is a high level
document that outlines your
intention to operate in a
quality manner. It outlines why
you are in business, what your
intentions are, how you are
applying the standard and how
your business operates.
Develop support documentation
This is typically a procedures
manual that supports the Quality
manual. Quite simply, it
outlines what you do to complete
a task. It describes who does
what, in what order and to what
standard.
Implement your Quality
Management System
The key to implementation is
communication and training.
During the implementation phase
everyone operates to the
procedures and collects records
that demonstrate you are doing
what you say you are doing.
Consider a pre-assessment
A pre-assessment by your
registrar normally takes place
about 6 weeks into the
implementation of the quality
system. The purpose of the
pre-assessment is to identify
areas where you may not be
operating to the standard. This
allows you to correct any areas
of concern you may have before
the initial assessment.
Gain registration
You should arrange your initial
assessment with your registrar.
At this point the registrar will
review your QMS and determine
whether you should be
recommended for registration.
Continual assessment
Once you have received
registration and been awarded
your certificate, you can begin
to advertise your success and
promote your business. To
maintain your registration, all
you need to do is continue to
use your quality system. This
will be periodically checked by
your registrar to ensure that
your Quality System continues to
meet the requirements of the
standard.
QMS Registration
Registration to
ISO 13485 takes place when an
accredited 3rd party visits an organization,
assesses the management system
and issues a certificate to show
that the organization abides by
to the principles set out in
ISO 13485.
Your Quality Management Systems
certificate is a sign of
acceptability which saves you
having to prove your quality
standards to discriminating
customers.
ISO 13485 speaks an
international language.
Why do I need registration?
Gaining registration to
ISO
13485
through various certification
bodies will help your
organization flourish. Whether
you are looking to operate
internationally or to expand
locally to accommodate new
business,
ISO
13485 will help you
demonstrate to customers that
you have a commitment to
quality.
The regular assessment process
will ensure you continually use,
monitor and improve your
processes.
Registration can improve overall
performance, remove uncertainty
and widen market opportunities.

To
know more about ISO
13485 and ISO
13485 Consultancy Services
please contact us on +91 9600001996
and mail to
info@nucleus-india.com