Core Principles of Verification

  Blog    |     March 04, 2026

Verifying design change approval records is a critical quality and compliance activity, ensuring changes are properly assessed, authorized, and implemented. Here’s a structured approach to thorough verification:

  1. Completeness: All required information is present.
  2. Compliance: Process aligns with internal procedures and external regulations.
  3. Traceability: Clear links between the change request, approval, implementation, and verification.
  4. Effectiveness: Change was implemented correctly and achieves intended results.

Step-by-Step Verification Process

Preparation & Scope Definition

  • Identify Relevant Records: Gather all documentation for the specific design change:
    • Design Change Request (DCR) / Engineering Change Notice (ECN)
    • Impact Assessment (Design, Manufacturing, Quality, Supply Chain, Regulatory, Safety)
    • Risk Analysis (FMEA, HARA, etc.)
    • Verification & Validation Plan/Results
    • Approval Signatures (Engineering, Manufacturing, Quality, Regulatory, etc.)
    • Implementation Records (Work Orders, Revision Updates, Training Records)
    • Verification Records (Inspection Reports, Test Results)
    • Customer/Regulatory Communication Records (if applicable)
  • Define Verification Criteria: Based on:
    • Internal Quality Management System (QMS) procedures (e.g., ISO 9001, AS9100, ISO 13485).
    • Industry-specific regulations (e.g., FDA 21 CFR Part 820, EMDR).
    • Customer requirements.
    • Company engineering standards.
  • Assemble Resources: Trained auditors/verifiers, checklists, access to systems (PLM, ERP, QMS).

Record Review & Completeness Check

  • Review the DCR/ECN: Ensure it clearly defines:
    • What is being changed (part number, drawing/specification number, revision level).
    • Reason for change (customer request, defect correction, cost reduction, improvement).
    • Detailed description of the change.
    • Proposed effective date.
  • Verify Impact Assessment: Confirm it comprehensively addresses:
    • Design Impact: Compatibility, functionality, performance, safety.
    • Manufacturing Impact: Process changes, tooling, capacity, training.
    • Quality Impact: Inspection methods, testing requirements, defect potential.
    • Supply Chain Impact: Sourcing, lead times, supplier changes.
    • Regulatory/Safety Impact: Compliance implications, risk mitigation.
  • Check Risk Analysis: Verify it was performed and documented, identifying potential failures and controls.
  • Confirm Approval Signatures: Ensure all required/approved signatures are present and legible. Verify signatories have authority (check job titles/roles in procedure).
  • Verify Implementation Records: Check evidence the change was physically implemented:
    • Drawing/specification revisions are updated with correct revision levels and dates.
    • Work orders/production orders reflect the change.
    • Tooling/fixtures were modified/replaced.
    • Training records for affected personnel.
  • Review Verification & Validation Results: Confirm evidence that:
    • The implemented change meets design requirements.
    • Production processes using the change are validated.
    • Performance/safety testing was completed and passed.
    • Inspection/test reports are complete and acceptable.

Compliance & Process Adherence Verification

  • Against Internal Procedures: Check if the change followed the defined workflow:
    • Was the DCR/ECR initiated correctly?
    • Was the assessment period adhered to?
    • Were all required stakeholders consulted and approved?
    • Was verification performed before full implementation?
    • Was configuration management (revision control) followed?
  • Against Regulations/Standards: Verify compliance with specific requirements:
    • Traceability to design history files (21 CFR 820.30(j)).
    • Change control procedures documented and followed.
    • Risk management activities (ISO 14971, IEC 62304).
    • Post-market change reporting requirements (if applicable).
  • Against Customer Requirements: Ensure any specific customer approval processes or documentation were met.

Traceability & Linkage Check

  • Trace Forward: Follow the change from approval to implementation and verification.

    DCR/ECR -> Approved Design -> Updated Drawings/Specs -> Production Implementation -> Verification Reports.

  • Trace Backward: Ensure the change is linked to its origin.

    DCR/ECR -> Root Cause (e.g., customer complaint, internal audit finding, test failure).

  • Cross-Reference: Verify links between related documents:
    • Impact assessment references the correct DCR/ECR.
    • Risk analysis references the impact assessment.
    • Verification plan references the change description.
    • Test reports reference the verification plan and acceptance criteria.

Effectiveness & Follow-Up Verification

  • Review Verification Results: Confirm the change achieved its intended purpose without introducing new problems.
  • Check Corrective Actions: If verification identified issues, verify root cause analysis and corrective actions were implemented and verified.
  • Monitor Post-Implementation: (Especially for high-risk changes)
    • Review early production/inspection data for unexpected issues.
    • Check customer feedback for related problems.
    • Ensure configuration management remains accurate.

Documentation & Reporting

  • Document Findings: Record verification results, including:
    • Records reviewed.
    • Criteria applied.
    • Evidence of compliance/non-compliance.
    • Identified gaps or deficiencies.
    • Recommendations for corrective action.
  • Report: Prepare a formal verification report summarizing findings and conclusions.
  • Track Corrective Actions: Monitor the resolution of any identified deficiencies.

Key Considerations & Best Practices

  • Independence: The verifier should be independent of the change implementation team whenever possible.
  • Risk-Based Approach: Focus more rigorously on high-risk changes (safety, critical functions, regulatory impact).
  • Version Control: Ensure all referenced documents are the correct, latest versions.
  • Digital vs. Paper: If using electronic systems (PLM, QMS), verify system controls (audit trails, electronic signatures, access permissions) are functioning.
  • Training: Ensure verifiers understand the procedures, regulations, and products involved.
  • Continuous Improvement: Use verification findings to improve the design change process itself.
  • Common Pitfalls to Watch For:
    • Missing approvals or signatures.
    • Incomplete impact/risk assessments.
    • Verification performed after full implementation.
    • Lack of traceability between change and origin.
    • Failure to update all affected documentation (e.g., BOMs, work instructions).
    • Inadequate configuration management.

By following this systematic approach, you can confidently verify that design change approval records are accurate, complete, compliant, and provide a reliable history of the product's evolution.


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