Absence of Refresher Training on Critical SOPs: A Risk to GMP Compliance
Introduction to the Audit Finding
1. Training Stagnation
Employees undergo initial training but are not retrained on critical SOPs over time.
2. Compliance Erosion
As procedures evolve, lack of refresher training results in outdated understanding of key controls.
3. Staff Forgetfulness
Without reinforcement, employees forget critical steps or rationales, increasing deviation risk.
4. Misaligned with Risk
High-risk processes often lack periodic review or retraining, despite their impact on quality.
5. Data Integrity Threat
Failure to reinforce ALCOA+ principles periodically compromises documentation practices.
6. Poor Inspection Readiness
Personnel unable to explain procedures clearly during audits due to knowledge atrophy.
7. No Refresher Policy
Training SOPs often do not define periodic retraining intervals for critical operations.
8. Link to GMP audit checklist
Audit readiness includes verifying that refresher training has occurred within defined timelines.
Regulatory Expectations and Inspection Observations
1. 21 CFR 211.25(a)
Training must be on a continuing basis and applicable to the tasks performed.
2. EU GMP Chapter 2.10
Requires regular evaluation and refresher training for personnel involved in GMP activities.
3. WHO TRS 996
Emphasizes planned periodic retraining as part of quality system maturity.
4. FDA 483 Examples
“Lack of periodic refresher training on aseptic processing SOPs for
5. MHRA Observations
Noted instances where retraining was only done after deviations or non-conformities.
6. CDSCO Expectation
States that retraining should be proactive and scheduled for all high-impact SOPs.
7. EMA Commentary
Considers lack of retraining on critical SOPs as a systemic failure in the training program.
8. TGA Audit Language
Audits cite “inadequate refresher training” where SOPs were revised, but no follow-up occurred.
Root Causes of Refresher Training Failure
1. No SOP on Refresher Frequency
Training procedures lack defined intervals for repeating SOP training.
2. Absence of SOP Criticality Assessment
All SOPs are treated equally; critical ones are not flagged for increased training attention.
3. Training Fatigue
Staff are overburdened with initial training, and retraining is deprioritized.
4. Over-Reliance on Deviations
Retraining occurs reactively — only when a deviation forces the issue.
5. Disconnected LMS and Change Control
No triggers exist to launch retraining after major procedural changes.
6. No Training Schedule Tracker
Organizations fail to maintain a calendar or reminder system for periodic refreshers.
7. Unclear Accountability
No assigned owner for ensuring refresher training is performed and documented.
8. Training Not Linked to Risk
Routine tasks get retraining while complex, high-impact SOPs are overlooked.
Prevention of Refresher Training Lapses
1. SOP on Refresher Frequency
Create a policy that mandates annual or biennial retraining on SOPs classified as “critical.”
2. SOP Criticality Mapping
Classify all SOPs by risk and determine retraining needs accordingly.
3. Use of LMS Alerts
Configure learning systems to send alerts when SOPs near expiration of training cycle.
4. Include Retraining in Change Control
Ensure that all major SOP changes automatically trigger retraining tasks.
5. Define Roles in Training SOP
Assign responsibility to QA or department heads for retraining coordination and documentation.
6. Quarterly Training Review Meetings
Review training status, upcoming retraining needs, and missed sessions.
7. Retraining as KPI
Define a quality KPI: % of critical SOPs with completed retraining on schedule.
8. Include in Internal Audits
Audit teams must verify if refresher training is being conducted and documented per plan.
Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPA)
1. Perform Gap Analysis
Identify all critical SOPs with no documented retraining in the past 12 months.
2. Implement Immediate Retraining
Schedule and complete overdue refresher training for applicable personnel.
3. Revise Training SOP
Include sections on retraining frequency, triggers, and documentation procedures.
4. Establish Critical SOP List
Maintain a controlled list of SOPs that require mandatory refresher training.
5. Link LMS with SOP Versioning
Use integrated systems to automatically prompt retraining upon version changes.
6. Develop Refresher Training Calendar
Create an annual calendar with quarterly reviews and execution plans.
7. Monitor with QA Oversight
QA should review retraining compliance during regular internal audits and MBR reviews.
8. Continuous Improvement Feedback
Solicit feedback on training sessions to ensure relevance and knowledge retention.