Audit-proof data migration in validated environments
31. March 2023
Reading time: 2 minutes
Data migration strongly adheres to the core principle of Data Integrity, which is one of the most critical GxP inspection focus areas and a core aspect of Computer System Validation (CSV).
Data migration refers to the process of transferring electronic data (including documents and configuration settings) from one system, also known as a legacy system, to another. In validated environments especially, data migration is a complex process that requires careful planning and execution to ensure that data is accurately and completely transferred from the legacy system to the new system with minimal disruption and downtime.
According to ALCOA+, data integrity ensures that data is Attributable, Legible, Contemporaneous, Original, and Accurate throughout its entire lifecycle from creation to decommissioning.
The essential control logic in the flow of CSV activities must also be guaranteed during data migration:
Data migration should first be piloted in a sandbox environment.
A data migration strategy, plan or specification with mapping tables must be approved before data migration takes place in a qualified and controlled infrastructure environment. A migration plan shall determine both the legacy and the new systems, define which data will be migrated and which will not, approach/tools, and if data will be transferred identically, changed or enriched.
To ensure correctness, completeness, and consistency, it is vital to perform both, a documented quantitative and a qualitative verification. Verification must cover all migration relevant infrastructure environments including production.
Quantitative verification typically involves counting, measuring, or comparing data. Verifying the number of records or columns transferred, checking the data type and format, and comparing the migrated data to the source data for consistency are all examples of quantitative checks. In most cases this is done by a qualified tool which counts the data and checks the data formatting on a technical level.
In contrast, qualitative verification typically involves business expertise reviewing the content of the data to ensure the records make sense and serve their intended purpose.
For a thorough qualitative verification, we typically recommend the following approach:
Author
Riad Beqiri
Riad's consulting focus is on ensuring uniform PM standards for efficient collaboration, optimizing project execution, and supporting project management. In addition, he accompanies software validations.
Author
Sandra Weniger-Niederberger
Sandra's consulting focus is on the interpretating and risk-appropriately implementating regulatory requirements in processes and systems, coaching, and digital transformation projects in Compliance, Quality Management as well as Regulatory Affairs.