Manual 057 Trending of Stability Data
Manual 057 Trending of Stability Data
1 Purpose
3 Definitions
3.2 Trend
A pattern of data that indicates change over time. This data may demonstrate
either an increasing or decreasing trend (change of mean) for the stability
indicating parameter over time or the data may indicate no discernible change at
all. The change may be linear or non-linear.
A single result or a number of results that do not follow the expected trend, for a
particular batch or series of batches, either in comparison with other stability
studies or with respect to previous results collected during a stability study. There
are three types of OOT situations identified in this guideline: Atypical result,
Atypical trend and Adverse trend.
A single result that does not follow the expected trend for a stability indicating
parameter compared to previous results from the same study.
It is the responsibility of the Lead Team/Site (acting as the Commercial Stability Site)
assigned to a contractor to ensure that the contractor has procedures in place to
comply with this guideline. This responsibility shall be clearly documented in the
relevant Quality Assurance Agreement.
5 Guideline
5.1 Introduction
The registered retest period/shelf life of a drug substance/product will have been
set taking into account the specification to be registered and the trends seen in
stability studies completed or ongoing at the time of new product and/or new
primary pack registration. However, these studies will have been conducted on
relatively few batches, some made only at pilot scale.
Therefore, the Commercial Stability Site must use trending of stability data
to support the retest period/shelf-life of a drug substance/product as well as
to indicate when a change to retest period/shelf-life and/or cautionary labeling
statement is required. Trending must also be used as a tool to identify significant
trends and recommend release alert limits when necessary.
The formulation site must take appropriate action to ensure that drug substance/
product release procedures are updated to take into account the latest stability trend
analysis reports issued by the Commercial Stability Site.
When new results from a stability study are available, the data must be evaluated as
typical or atypical against the reference data. A visual inspection of the data, for
example by using a scatter plot, may be sufficient to identify typical or atypical trends
and to predict adverse trends. If a visual inspection is not sufficient, further statistical
evaluation should be initiated.
It is important to take into consideration the amount of data that is being evaluated, as
it may be too early in the study to have sufficient data to provide confidence that OOT
predictions are accurate.
The review of individual results should be performed as soon as possible after the
results have been obtained and ideally by the responsible laboratory. By doing so
it is possible to either confirm an atypical result or identify the probable cause of
the atypical result.
Examples of atypical trend situations are when one or more of the following
events occur:
Examples of atypical and adverse trends are illustrated in simple scatter plots in
appendix 3.
When an atypical trend is identified, the actions must follow the steps outlined in
The data should be presented initially as a scatter plot, allowing simple visual
inspection of the characteristics of the parameter over time. Make sure that the
time axis is correct. This method can be used to identify both atypical results and
atypical trends by comparison with normal/typical stability results both within
and between studies.
Alert limits for stability data could be either non-statistical (absolute settings) or
statistical (based on reference data). Alert limits, based on reference data, can be
used as an aid in identifying atypical results or atypical trends.