Course Code: TC-GMP-RCA-10  |  Version: 1.0  |  Duration: 4 hours  |  Level: Intermediate

Course Overview

Root cause analysis is not a form to be completed. It is a discipline — a rigorous, structured approach to understanding why failures occur so that they can be prevented from recurring. In GMP-regulated environments, poor root cause analysis is one of the most consistently cited FDA inspection findings: a CAPA built on a misidentified root cause will not prevent the next event.

This course provides a comprehensive, practical guide to root cause analysis in pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical device and food manufacturing environments. It covers the full spectrum of RCA methods — from the Five Whys and Fishbone diagrams used for straightforward process deviations, to Fault Tree Analysis and Failure Mode and Effects Analysis for complex, multi-causal systemic failures. More importantly, it teaches when to use each method, how to apply it correctly, and how to recognise when the wrong method has been chosen.

Every method is taught through worked examples drawn from real GMP scenarios: OOS results, batch failures, contamination events, equipment malfunctions, documentation errors and systemic quality system breakdowns.

Learning Objectives

On completion, learners will be able to:

  • Define root cause analysis and explain its importance as a GMP requirement under FDA 21 CFR 211.192 and ICH Q10
  • Distinguish between immediate causes, contributing factors and root causes, and explain why only the root cause drives prevention of recurrence
  • Apply the Five Whys technique correctly to single-causal-chain GMP failures, avoiding common errors such as stopping at operator error or building on assumed evidence
  • Construct a Fishbone (Ishikawa) Diagram using the 6M framework and apply it to complex multi-cause GMP failures
  • Explain Fault Tree Analysis structure and logic (AND/OR gates, minimal cut sets) and apply FTA to complex systemic failures and prospective risk assessment
  • Build a Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA), calculate Risk Priority Numbers, and apply FMEA both prospectively and retrospectively in a GMP context
  • Select the appropriate RCA method — or combination of methods — for any GMP deviation scenario based on complexity, classification and cause structure
  • Write a complete, regulatory-standard GMP investigation report that passes the stranger test
  • Develop effective CAPA directly derived from the identified root cause, including scope extension, effectiveness criteria and defined review dates
  • Explain the regulatory expectations for GMP investigations including timeliness, CAPA adequacy, and effectiveness checking

Audience

QA investigators, QA managers, production supervisors, QC analysts, CAPA owners, validation leads

Course Content

Lesson 1 — Foundations of Root Cause Analysis
6 Topics
1 Quiz
Slide 1 — What Is Root Cause Analysis?
Slide 2 — Why RCA Fails: The Most Common Investigative Errors
Slide 3 — The Investigative Mindset: Evidence First
Slide 4 — Immediate Cause vs Root Cause: A Worked Example
Slide 5 — The RCA Process: Six Steps from Event to CAPA
Slide 6 — Lesson 1 — Key Takeaways
Lesson 1 — Knowledge Check
Lesson 2 — The Five Whys — Drilling to the Root
6 Topics
1 Quiz
Slide 7 — The Five Whys: Origins and Principle
Slide 8 — Applying Five Whys — Step by Step
Slide 9 — Five Whys — Worked Example: OOS Assay Result
Slide 10 — Five Whys — Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Slide 11 — When to Use Five Whys — Applicability Guide
Slide 12 — Lesson 2 — Key Takeaways
Lesson 2 — Knowledge Check
6 Topics
1 Quiz
Slide 13 — The Fishbone Diagram: Structure and Purpose
Slide 14 — The 6M Framework in GMP — Applied
Slide 16 — Combining Fishbone with Five Whys
Slide 17 — When to Use Fishbone — Applicability and Limitations
Slide 18 — Lesson 3 — Key Takeaways
Lesson 3 — Knowledge Check
Lesson 4 — Fault Tree Analysis — Mapping System Failures
6 Topics
1 Quiz
Slide 19 — Fault Tree Analysis: Structure and Logic
Slide 21 — FTA vs Five Whys vs Fishbone: Choosing the Right Tool
Slide 22 — Applying FTA to Data Integrity Failures
Slide 23 — FTA Practical Application: Steps and Documentation
Slide 24 — Lesson 4 — Key Takeaways
Lesson 4 — Knowledge Check
Lesson 5 — FMEA — Failure Mode and Effects Analysis
6 Topics
1 Quiz
Slide 25 — FMEA: Structure and the Risk Priority Number
Slide 26 — FMEA Applied to GMP — Worked Example: Tablet Coating
Slide 28 — Severity, Occurrence and Detection Scales in GMP
Slide 29 — When to Use FMEA — Applicability Guide
Slide 30 — Lesson 5 — Key Takeaways
Lesson 5 — Knowledge Check
6 Topics
1 Quiz
Slide 31 — The RCA Method Selection Framework
Slide 32 — Writing the GMP Investigation Report: Structure
Slide 33 — Developing Effective CAPA from Root Cause
Slide 34 — RCA in Practice: Regulatory Expectations
Slide 35 — Integrating RCA Methods: A Complete Case Study
Slide 36 — Course — Key Takeaways
Lesson 6 — Knowledge Check
Reference — Regulations, Glossary and Certification
Final Quiz
Final Assessment — Management Review in GMP Environments