Dubai Seminar on The A to Z’s of Water Systems for
Dubai - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Dubai
25.2048493
55.270782800000006
Description
Course "Mastering Biofilm Control, Monitoring, Validation and Excursion Investigations of Water Systems for Bio/Pharma, Medical Devices, and Cosmetics Industries" has been pre-approved by RAPS as eligible for up to 12 credits towards a participant's RAC recertification upon full completion.
Overview:
This course is designed to provide a microbiology-focused education about all aspects of water systems and how biofilm manages to thrive there. Prior microbiological education or training, though a plus, is not a requirement because engineers and other non-biologists also need this training if they are involved with any aspect of water systems. The instructor will provide the necessary background needed to understand this very important subject matter. This understanding is essential to the proper design, validation, operation, monitoring, maintenance, troubleshooting, and excursion investigations of a high purity water system. Without this understanding, water system control consists of a set of rules that often don't work and can cause very costly system downtime or even product recalls, and leaves the user without a clue as to what went wrong or how to effectively fix it so it doesn't recur.
Why should you attend:
Much fear and hype exists with pharmaceutical biofilms, especially those in water systems. Long term biofilm control cannot be achieved from a blind set of hand-me-down rules for design and operation. One must truly understand biofilm to be able to control it. And because every water system is unique, understanding how biofilm is trying to grow in your system, which could be different than any other system. This course will give you that understanding that is translatable to any system, so that uneventful microbial control is possible. Without this understanding you will quickly find that blind rules for operation (and design) eventually fail to work, and the consequences of failure will far exceed the educational costs that could have prevented it.
Who will benefit:
This 2-day course is particularly relevant to managers, supervisors, and operatives taking on new responsibilities related to water, but also for experienced water personnel to learn the "true" whys behind what they do and perhaps better ways of doing things. Specific positions that would benefit are:
Microbiology Laboratory supervisors and analysts responsible for water sampling and testing
Quality Assurance personnel responsible for water system deviation management and change control
Regulatory and Compliance professionals responsible for FDA interactions
Process and Utility Engineers responsible for water system maintenance, repairs, troubleshooting, and excursion mitigation
Facility Engineers responsible for water system design or renovation
Validation personnel for water system qualification
Change Control personnel involved in water system changes and repairs
Production Managers involved with water system use for manufacturing and cleaning
Laboratory Managers and Supervisors responsible for lab water systems and other water sources
Agenda:
Day 1 Schedule
Lecture 1:
What Makes Water Systems Have Microbial Quality Problems
Understand biofilm basics and how it develops
Understand the impact of biofilm on the commonly used purification unit operations
Understand how various commonly used microbial control strategies work (or don't work) to control biofilm development
Understand the how, where, and why of microbial monitoring, action levels, etc.
Debunk a few water system myths
Get answers to your own water system questions
Lecture 2:
Successful Sanitization Approaches for Trouble-Free Water Quality
Material and construction limitations
Continuous vs intermittent sanitization
The importance of biofilm removal
How sanitants work (or don't work)
When to sanitize
Troubleshooting sanitization problems
Lecture 3:
Water System Validation by Logic Instead of Tradition
Why validate a water system?
Basic ground rules for water systems before you validate them
Micro Test Method "validation"
Minimum validation expectations
How to figure out what you should validate
What happens after the honeymoon is over
Is validation ever really over?
Special considerations for lab water systems
Are packaged waters a viable option?
Lecture 4:
Implementing Changes to a Validated System
Purpose of a Change Control program - a help, not a hindrance
When is a change major vs minor, requiring full vs limited re-qualification?
What about water use during re-qualifications?
FDA validation expectations
Reliance on logic and common sense and the disservice of precedent and paradigms
Additional useful tips
Lecture 5:
Reducing Water Microbial Excursions & Improving Investigations
What are excursions?
Water system dilemma: process control or quality control (utility or raw material), or both
Intended roles of Alert/Action Levels and Specifications
Investigation, necessary and often fruitless
Excursion responses and impact
Criticality of valves, hoses, & outlet flushing
Diagnosing the source of the problem
Minimizing unnecessary excursion responses through best practices
Day 2 Schedule
Lecture 6:
Understanding and Controlling Endotoxin
Where does endotoxin come from?
What are the properties of endotoxin?
How do you get rid of it?
How do you detect it?
What assay controls are used?
What are the endotoxin specs for water?
How do you control it?
Lecture 7:
Harmonizing vs Optimizing Water Microbial Testing for System Quality Control
Water harmonization that has occurred
Water Micro TM "Dis-Harmonization"
A little about Biofilm
Biofilm diversity in water systems
Micro TM options and evaluation protocol
The good and bad of Micro harmonization
Where RMMs can fit in
Parting wisdom
Lecture 8:
Microbial Enumeration Issues with High Purity Water Systems
Microbial Enumeration Issues with High Purity Water Systems
Biofilm enumeration issues (planktonic vs surface)
Traditional cultivative approach issues
Validation of your test method
Alternative TM choices (advantages/disadvantages)
Significance of water isolates
Sampling issues
Establishing Alert/Action Levels and Water Specs and defending them to FDA
Lecture 9:
Water System Investigation "How-To's" and Example Case Studies
Gathering and assessing existing data and symptoms
Considering user opinions
Investigation approach elements
Recognizing red herrings/false positives
Recognizing possible root causes
Water system contamination case studies
Parting kernels of water system wisdom
Lecture 10:
What USP Does and Doesn't Say about PW, WFI, Pure Steam and Micro Issues
PW, WFI, Pure Steam micro specifications?
<1231> Starting water issues
<1231> Misunderstood issues clarified
<1231> Microbiological test issues clarified
<1231> Suggested micro test method
<1231> Micro Specifications
<1231> Alert and Action Levels and max's
Recent/Upcoming USP water changes
Discrepancies between pharmacopeia's
Speaker:
Teri C. Soli
Principal Consultant, Soli Pharma Solutions
Teri C. ("T.C.") Soli,Ph.D. is President of Soli Pharma Solutions, Inc, serving the Pharmaceutical, Biotech, Medical Device, Dialysis, Cosmetics and Personal Care Products and related equipment and instrument manufacturing industries with training, auditing, and troubleshooting expertise. He has over 32 years of combined pharmaceutical experience as a consultant as well as with operating companies such as DSM Pharmaceuticals, Glaxo Wellcome, Burroughs Wellcome, and Pfizer. Dr. Soli's career-long experience with water systems and product and process contamination troubleshooting, coupled with USP, ISPE, PhRMA, and PDA committee involvements, afford him practical knowledge and troubleshooting skills with contamination control, cleaning, sterilization, sterile and non-sterile processes, validation, laboratory testing, excursion investigations and all aspects of high purity water systems.
He is in his third 5 year term on USP Expert Committees responsible for Pharmaceutical Water, is the author of USP's Informational Chapter <1231> on pharmaceutical water, and helped develop the Water Conductivity and TOC specifications used by USP and adopted world-wide. He has motivated many audiences and course attendees with practical water system information. He has also authored many articles and chapters in books and industry standards published by PDA and ISPE including chapter authorships in the 2nd ed. ISPE Baseline Guide for Water and Steam Systems, ISPE's Good Practice Guide: Ozone Sanitization of Pharmaceutical Water Systems, and chapters in several PDA books on pharmaceutical and laboratory water systems and biofilm control. He earned a Ph.D. degree in Microbiology and Immunology from the University of Arizona and M.S. and B.S. degrees in Microbiology from Texas A&M University.
Location:Dubai, UAE Date: July 18th and 19th, 2016 and Time: 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM
Venue: WILL BE ANNOUNCED SOON
Price:
Register now and save $200. (Early Bird)
Price: $1,695.00 (Seminar Fee for One Delegate – Without Stay)
Until June 20, Early Bird Price: $1,695.00 From June 21 to July 16, Regular Price: $1,895.00
Price: $2,095.00 (Seminar Fee for One Delegate - With Stay)
Until June 20, Early Bird Price: $2,095.00 From June 21 to July 16, Regular Price: $2,295.00
Register for 5 attendees (With stay) Includes Price: $7,333.00
Until June 20, Early Bird Price: $1,0475.00 From June 21 to July 16, Regular Price: $1,0675.00
You Save: $3,142.5 (30%)
Quick Contact:
NetZealous DBA as GlobalCompliancePanel
Phone: 1-800-447-9407
Fax: 302-288-6884
Email: support@globalcompliancepanel.com
Website: http://www.globalcompliancepanel.com
Registration Link - http://bit.ly/1U5mScY-Mastering-Biofilm-Control
Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/globalcompliancepanel
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Start:
2016-07-18T07:30:00+04:00
End:
2016-07-19T16:30:00+04:00
Category
Business
Tickets
Seminar Fee for One Delegate – Without stay-Early Bird
1695.0
USD
50
Seminar Fee for One Delegate - With Stay-Early Bird
2095.0
USD
50
Register for 5 attendees (With stay) Includes-Early Bird
7333.0
USD
50