
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Subhi breaks down ICH Q12, the guideline focused on post-approval change management and pharmaceutical product lifecycle management.
The core question behind ICH Q12 is simple: once a product is approved, what is actually binding, what is supporting information, and how should future changes be managed?
This episode covers the major Q12 concepts, including reporting categories, Established Conditions, supporting information, Post-Approval Change Management Protocols, the Product Lifecycle Management document, and the role of the Pharmaceutical Quality System.
Subhi also discusses why Q12 matters for drug-device combination products, where lifecycle changes may involve CMC information, device constituent parts, functional performance characteristics, and the broader control strategy.
Key topics covered:
Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction to ICH Q12
00:46 Why post-approval change gets difficult
02:45 Reporting categories
03:14 Established Conditions vs supporting information
04:10 EC examples: CQAs, CPPs, methods, sites, and process information
05:32 Post-Approval Change Management Protocols
06:38 PLCM document
08:08 Drug-device combination product callout
10:11 PQS and change management
10:28 Closing thoughts
Questions or feedback? Email [email protected]
Source referenced in this episode: ICH Q12, Technical and Regulatory Considerations for Pharmaceutical Product Lifecycle Management, Final version adopted 20 November 2019. Screenshots shown in this video are from the ICH Q12 guideline and are included for educational commentary. https://database.ich.org/sites/default/files/Q12_Guideline_Step4_2019_1119.pdf
Subhi Saadeh is the Founder and Principal at Let’s Combinate, where he helps teams develop and control drug-device combination products by aligning quality systems, development, and regulatory expectations across drug and device domains. He is a consultant, auditor, trainer, and speaker with experience across Pfizer, Gilead, and Baxter, supporting the development and launch of combination products across vaccines, biologics, and generics.
By Subhi Saadeh4.9
1313 ratings
In this episode, Subhi breaks down ICH Q12, the guideline focused on post-approval change management and pharmaceutical product lifecycle management.
The core question behind ICH Q12 is simple: once a product is approved, what is actually binding, what is supporting information, and how should future changes be managed?
This episode covers the major Q12 concepts, including reporting categories, Established Conditions, supporting information, Post-Approval Change Management Protocols, the Product Lifecycle Management document, and the role of the Pharmaceutical Quality System.
Subhi also discusses why Q12 matters for drug-device combination products, where lifecycle changes may involve CMC information, device constituent parts, functional performance characteristics, and the broader control strategy.
Key topics covered:
Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction to ICH Q12
00:46 Why post-approval change gets difficult
02:45 Reporting categories
03:14 Established Conditions vs supporting information
04:10 EC examples: CQAs, CPPs, methods, sites, and process information
05:32 Post-Approval Change Management Protocols
06:38 PLCM document
08:08 Drug-device combination product callout
10:11 PQS and change management
10:28 Closing thoughts
Questions or feedback? Email [email protected]
Source referenced in this episode: ICH Q12, Technical and Regulatory Considerations for Pharmaceutical Product Lifecycle Management, Final version adopted 20 November 2019. Screenshots shown in this video are from the ICH Q12 guideline and are included for educational commentary. https://database.ich.org/sites/default/files/Q12_Guideline_Step4_2019_1119.pdf
Subhi Saadeh is the Founder and Principal at Let’s Combinate, where he helps teams develop and control drug-device combination products by aligning quality systems, development, and regulatory expectations across drug and device domains. He is a consultant, auditor, trainer, and speaker with experience across Pfizer, Gilead, and Baxter, supporting the development and launch of combination products across vaccines, biologics, and generics.

30,722 Listeners

1,234 Listeners

112,193 Listeners

56,572 Listeners

0 Listeners