Executive brief
Validation lifecycle management is becoming a critical discipline for life sciences organizations because validation can no longer be treated as a one-time event. Cloud platforms change constantly, regulated systems evolve through updates and integrations, and teams are expected to move faster while still maintaining traceability, control, and inspection readiness.
USDM points to this shift in Rethink Your Validation Approach to Drive Innovation, where the goal is not just to validate a system at implementation, but to manage the full lifecycle from planning and deployment through change control, maintenance, and retirement.
Validation lifecycle management is the structured, ongoing coordination of requirements, risk assessments, validation documentation, testing, approvals, change control, and compliance evidence across the full life of a regulated system. It ensures that systems remain validated as business needs, configurations, vendors, and releases change over time.
USDM’s Automate Validation Across Your Tech Stack white paper frames this as a building-block approach, where reusable validation controls, automated testing, and change management reduce repetitive effort while keeping GxP systems in a controlled state.
Traditional validation approaches were built for slower-moving environments. Teams could validate a system, archive the documentation, and expect long stretches of stability. That model does not work well in modern life sciences environments where SaaS platforms update frequently, digital ecosystems are interconnected, and business teams need faster implementation cycles.
When validation is managed only as a project milestone, organizations often end up with fragmented records, redundant testing, and reactive remediation work. The result is higher cost, slower change adoption, and more compliance risk.
A mature validation lifecycle management approach helps organizations make validation repeatable, scalable, and aligned to real operational risk. It gives quality, IT, and system owners a common framework for managing change without starting from scratch each time.