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Robert Buchanan DHHS Food and Drug Administration Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

Lessons Learned in Initiating and Conducting Risk Assessments within a Risk Analysis Framework: A FDA/CFSAN Approach. Robert Buchanan DHHS Food and Drug Administration Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. Perspective. Risk Assessor vs. Risk Manager. Risk Manager vs. Risk Assessor.

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Robert Buchanan DHHS Food and Drug Administration Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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  1. Lessons Learned in Initiating and Conducting Risk Assessments within a Risk Analysis Framework: A FDA/CFSAN Approach Robert Buchanan DHHS Food and Drug Administration Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

  2. Perspective Risk Assessor vs. Risk Manager Risk Manager vs. Risk Assessor

  3. The Paradox • Codex Alimentarius “Principles and Guidelines for the Conduct of Microbial Risk Assessments” • Principle #2: There should be a functional separation between risk assessment and risk management • Important principle that doesn’t work if you achieve it

  4. Setting the Stage • Experience: conducted two large quantitative microbial risk assessments • Vibrio parahaemolyticus • Listeria monocytogenes • Learning: address the “bumps” encountered • to discuss lessons learned • to develop a risk analysis framework for future major risk assessments

  5. The Bumps • Resource intensive • Setting time frames and establishing deadlines • Establishing why risk assessment is being done • Establishing expectations • What a risk assessment can do? • Establishing boundaries • Who is in charge? • Who gets to decide? • Who settles conflicts?

  6. The Bumps • Communicating with risk managers (Why can’t risk assessors speak English?) • Modeling • Explaining uncertainty vs. variability • Lack of understanding of risk assessment techniques (Why are risk managers so dense?) • Getting risk managers to pay attention early

  7. The Bumps • Presenting the results • Interpretation • Transparency • Plain language (Who rights the report?) • Dealing with unexpected results • Review of risk assessments • Impact on risk management programs • Protecting the risk assessors against outside pressure

  8. Risk Analysis Working Group • Senior managers • Risk managers • Risk assessors • Scientists • “Modelers” • Project leaders • Risk Communicators • Facilitator

  9. Risk Analysis Working Group • Overall Goal: To improve the quality and consistency of “major” risk assessments conducted by the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

  10. What Are ‘Major’ Risk Assessments? • Non-routine, complex, and/or quantitative • Involve multiple program offices and/or cross-cutting in nature • Require a commitment of significant resources to complete

  11. Risk Analysis Working Group Specific Tasks: 1) Identify boundaries and responsibilities of key participants in the risk analysis process 2) Develop a process for identifying and selecting risk assessments conducted by CFSAN 3) Establish procedures for the conduct of risk assessment within a risk analysis framework

  12. Risk Management Risk Communication Risk Assessment Risk Analysis – The Theory • Traditional definition: risk analysis is composed of : • Risk Management • Risk Assessment • Risk Communication

  13. Risk Mgmt CFSAN Mgmt Risk Communi- cation FDA GC Risk Assess- ment FDA Mgnt Research Risk Analysis – The Reality • In CFSAN risk analysis is a “stew” of : • Center Management • Risk Management • Risk Assessment • Risk Communication • Research • Etc

  14. Procedures to Initiate and Conduct Risk Assessments • INITIATE: A decision-based approach to identify and select all ‘major’ risk assessments • Four phase process: concept generation, problem identification, data feasibility evaluation, disposition • CONDUCT: A systematic and iterative approach to conducting risk assessments • Four step process: Plan, Perform, Review, Publish

  15. The Identification and Selection Process

  16. Selection of Major Risk Assessments • Select major risk assessments on basis of • Center’s risk management needs • Center’s resources • Data feasibility

  17. Personal Observation • If science is complex, there is no consensus among stakeholders, and there are multiples ways of managing the risk – consider a quantitative risk assessment • If science is straight forward, there is general consensus among stakeholders, and there is only one risk management option – do not conduct a quantitative risk assessment

  18. Where do risk assessment ideas come from? • Stakeholders (public) • Follow up to completed risk assessment • Regulatory staff • Management • Researchers • Other agencies

  19. A Four Phase Selection Process Phase 1:Concept Generation Phase 2:Problem Formulation Phase 3:Feasibility Determination Phase 4:Disposition

  20. Selection Process • Identify and maintain list of potential RM questions for which a RA would assist with policy decisions • Identify hazards/commodities • State the RM question(s) • State the RA question(s) Concept Generation Problem Formulation Feasibility Determination Disposition (selection)

  21. Selection Process Management reviews list and approves specific RAs for further evaluation (feasibility determination) Concept Generation Problem Formulation Feasibility Determination Disposition (selection)

  22. Selection Process • Review literature to determine availability of data needed to conduct RA to answer RM questions • Recommend action: • More research needed • Modify RM question • Qualitative RA vs. Quantitative RA Concept Generation Problem Formulation Feasibility Determination Disposition (selection)

  23. Selection Process Using the results of the feasibility determination as an aid, management selects RAs to be conducted based on technical merit, resource availability, and other factors and get commitment of resources Concept Generation Problem Formulation Feasibility Determination Disposition (selection)

  24. Conducting the Risk Assessment

  25. Conducting the Risk Assessment A four step process: • Step 1: Plan • Step 2: Perform • Step 3: Review • Step 4: Publish

  26. Conducting the Risk Assessment • Step 1: Planning • Define scope • Identify resource needs • Assign teams • Develop timelines

  27. Conducting the Risk Assessment • Step 2: Perform • Answer risk management questions

  28. An Iterative Process Receive Charge from Risk Managers Receive Assumptions from RM Refine Assumptions for modeling Assemble data/model inputs Verify data/model inputs Develop model Audit model New data Run model/iterations Conduct sensitivity analysis Review results Draft Report

  29. Conducting the Risk Assessment • Step 3: • Review – ongoing process • Advisory Committees • Peer Review • SGE Panels • Public Comment • Approve • Clear

  30. Technical and Scientific Reviews of the Draft Risk Assessment Documents

  31. Conducting the Risk Assessment • Step 4: Publish • Develop “roll out” strategy • Public release of documents • Handling comments • Public comment

  32. Organization of Risk Analysis • Risk analysis should be conducted by teams: • Risk Management Team • Risk Assessment Team • Risk Communication Team • Meet regularly to discussion process and surface issues

  33. Organization of Risk Analysis • Established three unique positions to help with consistency, coordination, and making decisions • Science Advisor for Risk Analysis • Risk Analysis Coordinator • Risk Assessment Project Manager

  34. Summary of Recommendations Implemented • Decision-based approach to identify and select all ‘major’ risk assessments • Procedure for the conduct of risk assessment within risk analysis framework • Established new organizational structure

  35. Summary of Recommendations Implemented • Criteria to evaluate data quality • Procedures for the approval and release of risk assessments • Formal peer review process • Enhance capabilities to conduct risk assessments and interaction between chemical and microbiological risk assessments

  36. Report Available • “Initiation and Conduct of All ‘Major’ Risk Assessments within a Risk Analysis Framework” • Available on FDA website: • http//:www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/rafw-toc.html

  37. New Twists • OMB Guidelines on Data Quality • Court decisions of status risk assessment when used as part of a regulatory activity • Security issues when risk assessment used for food security activities

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