Design Controls

Design Controls

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Regulatory Affairs & Quality

Design Controls

Master every 21 CFR §820.30 and ISO 13485 §7.3 sub-clause — from Design Input to the Design History File — within the 2026 FDA QMSR transition.

RAQ-610Live OnlineAdvanced10 weeks (~90 hours)Certificate of Completion

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Design controls — §820.30 · DHF · QMSR
Code
RAQ-610
Focus area
Regulatory Affairs & Quality
Modality
Live Online
Level
Advanced
Duration
10 weeks (~90 hours)
Certificate
Of Completion

Course overview

Design Controls — 21 CFR §820.30 in the U.S. and ISO 13485 §7.3 internationally — are the discipline by which medical-device manufacturers demonstrate that a design meets user needs and intended use, is verified against design input, validated in the use environment, and traceable in a defensible Design History File. Design Controls are one of the areas the FDA inspects most often, a frequent source of Warning Letters, and the operational core of the work of R&D engineers, quality engineers and regulatory professionals supporting 510(k) or PMA submissions.

This instructor-led online course builds operational competence in the FDA Design Control framework under 21 CFR §820.30 and ISO 13485:2016 §7.3. It covers every Design Control sub-clause — design and development planning, design input, design output, design review, verification, validation, transfer, changes and the Design History File. Students examine the integration of risk management (ISO 14971) with Design Controls, the role of human-factors engineering (IEC 62366-1) in validation, and the FDA QMSR Final Rule (effective 2026-02-02) integrating 21 CFR Part 820 with ISO 13485:2016. Case studies draw on publicly available Warning Letters citing specific §820.30 deficiencies.

What you will learn

Apply the 21 CFR §820.30 (a)–(j) sub-clauses to a real or hypothetical device-development scenario.
Analyze a Design History File (DHF) index for completeness, traceability and inspection defensibility.
Differentiate Design Verification (§820.30(f)) and Design Validation (§820.30(g)) with the precision the FDA expects.
Build Design Inputs traceable to user needs and intended use, and Design Outputs traceable to Design Inputs.
Build a verification protocol with quantitative acceptance criteria.
Evaluate the integration of risk management (ISO 14971) at each Design Control sub-clause.
Apply IEC 62366-1 usability engineering to design validation.
Develop the index and architecture of a defensible Design History File.

Course topics

Benefits for you

Every sub-clause, in depth

§820.30 (a) through (j), clause by clause.

Verification vs. validation, precisely

The distinction the FDA expects, done right.

Built for the 2026 QMSR transition

§820.30 within the harmonized 21 CFR 820 / ISO 13485 framework.

An inspection-ready DHF index

The final project is a defensible Design History File index.

Frequently asked questions

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This is a Continuing Education professional development course leading to a Certificate of Completion. It is not a degree program and does not confer academic credit. Course materials and instructional language may vary by cohort. Please contact Aleph University for current delivery details.