Fault Tree Analysis
Fault Tree Analysis
Annex I.4
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
ICH Q9
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
http://www.sverdrup.com/safety/fta.pdf
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
OR
AND
Connects two or more faults that must occur simultaneously to cause the preceding fault
Source: Overview of Risk Management Techniques. Robert C. Menson, PhD (2004).
July 2006, slide 4
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
Production
outlier
Calibration
or
Lab error
or
systematic
or
Interfaces
others
random
other
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
Production
Cap
Bottle
Stability and
or
Bad fit
Formulation
Processing
Packaging
Solidify
Ageing
or
Supply Defect Too tightly Closed
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
Limitations
> > > > > > Only as good as input Time and resource consuming (needs FMEA as a complement ) Need skilled leader to focus on what is really important Need significant amount of information Human errors may be difficult to predict Many potential fault trees for a system - Some more useful than others - Need to evaluate contribution
July 2006, slide 10
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance
I.2: Failure Mode Effects Analysis (FMEA) I.4: Fault Tree Analysis (FTA)
FTA
Assumes failure of the functionality of a product FMEA Assumes component failure
Identifies the root cause Identifies functional failure as a result of component of functional failure failure Top down Bottom up
prepared by some members of the ICH Q9 EWG for example only; not an official policy/guidance