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Pharmaceutical

AQL 0.065–0.65 Critical
Quality Control & Inspection › Pharmaceutical

Why AQL Matters in Pharma

Pharmaceutical products carry direct health risks. A mislabelled dosage, a faulty blister pack seal, or contaminated packaging can endanger patients. Regulatory bodies such as the FDA and EMA enforce strict cGMP standards that require documented quality sampling at every stage.

AQL levels in pharma typically range from 0.065 for critical defects to 0.65 for minor cosmetic issues. This means even a single critical defect in a large batch can trigger a full lot rejection, protecting public health.

Typical AQL Levels

Defect Type AQL Inspection Level Notes
Critical (seal integrity, contamination) 0.065 Special S-4 Zero tolerance in most protocols
Major (wrong label, missing info) 0.15 General II Regulatory recall risk
Minor (cosmetic print shift) 0.65 General I Acceptable if no safety impact

Real-World Risk Scenarios

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Blister pack seal failure

A batch of 50,000 blister packs had micro-perforations in the foil seal. Without AQL 0.065 inspection, the compromised moisture barrier would have degraded the active ingredient, rendering the medication ineffective.

Correct AQL catches label error

Pre-shipment inspection at AQL 0.15 detected that 2% of cartons had the wrong dosage printed. The lot was held and relabelled before reaching pharmacies, avoiding a costly recall.

Skipped inspection leads to recall

A manufacturer skipped incoming material inspection. Contaminated raw packaging entered production, resulting in a Class II FDA recall affecting 200,000 units and costing over $4 million.

Applicable Standards

  • ISO 2859-1 / ANSI Z1.4
  • FDA 21 CFR Part 211 (cGMP)
  • EU GMP Annex 8
  • ICH Q7 (API)
  • WHO TRS 986 Annex 2
  • USP <1790> Visual Inspection

Calculate Your AQL

Use our free AQL calculator to determine the exact sample size and acceptance criteria for your pharmaceutical batch.

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