The Transfer of Validated Methods

John C. Fetzer
Instructor: John C. Fetzer
Date: Thursday January 9, 2025
Time:

10:00 AM PST | 01:00 PM EST

Duration: 60 Minutes
Webinar Id: 606129

Price Details

Live Webinar
$150. One Attendee
$290. Unlimited Attendees
Recorded Webinar
$190. One Attendee
$390. Unlimited Attendees
Combo Offers   (Live + Recorded)
$289 $340   One Attendee
$599 $680   Unlimited Attendees

Unlimited Attendees: Any number of participants

Recorded Version: Unlimited viewing for 6 months (Access information will be emailed 24 hours after the completion of live webinar)

Overview:

This webinar will discuss the best practices of the transfer of validated methods including statistics of analytical methods, how to define universal methods, how to make the method operation uniform, training issues, and the use of transferring methods.

Why you should Attend:

Even a detailed and well-written standard operating procedure for a method cannot ensure that 2 laboratories running on aliquots of the same will get statistically equivalent results.

Using different instrumentation, standards, reagents, solvents, and other chemicals, data systems, sample storage, handling procedures, and other variables is common and can lead to different results. Making each operation as similar as possible can be time-consuming and complicated.

Areas Covered in the Session:

  • The statistics of analytical methods
  • Defining universal standards
  • Making method operation uniform
  • Training issues
  • The use of Round-robin Samples
  • The Statistic of Transferring Methods

Who Will Benefit:

  • Lab Chemists
  • Lab Managers
  • Lab Technicians
  • Lab Analysts
  • Industries into Compliance Methodology (Biotech, Pharma)
  • Companies into Environmental Compliance or EPA

Speaker Profile
John C. Fetzer has had over 30 year experience in HPLC methods development. He has authored or co-authored over 50 peer-reviewed papers onl iquid chromatography, has served on the editorial advisory boards of the Journal of Chromatography, Analytical Chemistry, and Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry.

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