Responsibilities in audit process MCQs With Answer

Introduction: Responsibilities in audit process MCQs With Answer is designed for M.Pharm students preparing for exams and professional roles in quality assurance and regulatory affairs. This set focuses on the distinct responsibilities of auditors, auditees, management, and supporting units during planning, execution, reporting, and follow-up of audits in pharmaceutical settings. Questions emphasize practical responsibilities—such as evidence collection, independence, confidentiality, corrective and preventive action, and regulatory expectations under GMP/GCP/GLP—so students can apply concepts in real-world situations. Use these MCQs to test knowledge, identify learning gaps, and build confidence in managing or participating effectively in audit processes within pharmaceutical organizations.

Q1. What is the primary responsibility of the lead auditor during a pharmaceutical quality audit?

  • Ensuring the audited department implements immediate corrective actions
  • Collecting objective evidence, directing the audit team, and issuing the audit report
  • Approving deviations and batch releases for the audited area
  • Training auditees on GMP requirements during the audit

Correct Answer: Collecting objective evidence, directing the audit team, and issuing the audit report

Q2. Which responsibility best describes the role of the auditee during an audit?

  • Conducting independent internal audits of other departments
  • Providing access to records and personnel, answering auditors’ questions, and facilitating evidence review
  • Setting the audit scope and schedule for the audit program
  • Writing the final audit report and classifying findings

Correct Answer: Providing access to records and personnel, answering auditors’ questions, and facilitating evidence review

Q3. What is management’s key responsibility following receipt of an audit report?

  • Assigning blame to staff responsible for nonconformities
  • Ignoring minor observations unless regulators are involved
  • Reviewing findings, approving and resourcing corrective and preventive actions (CAPAs), and monitoring effectiveness
  • Rewriting the audit report to reduce the number of findings

Correct Answer: Reviewing findings, approving and resourcing corrective and preventive actions (CAPAs), and monitoring effectiveness

Q4. Which task is an auditor NOT typically responsible for?

  • Maintaining audit independence and objectivity
  • Making operational decisions for the auditee based on findings
  • Sampling records and observing processes to gather evidence
  • Classifying observations as observations, nonconformities, or major findings

Correct Answer: Making operational decisions for the auditee based on findings

Q5. During audit planning, what is the auditor’s primary responsibility?

  • Scheduling all laboratory work for the audited unit
  • Defining the audit scope, objectives, criteria, and preparing checklists and resource needs
  • Writing CAPAs before the audit begins
  • Training auditees on how to respond to questions

Correct Answer: Defining the audit scope, objectives, criteria, and preparing checklists and resource needs

Q6. What responsibility does the quality unit typically hold in the audit process?

  • Performing only external audits and never internal ones
  • Coordinating the audit program, ensuring auditor qualifications, and tracking CAPA effectiveness
  • Approving all production batch releases without review
  • Replacing the lead auditor if any findings are identified

Correct Answer: Coordinating the audit program, ensuring auditor qualifications, and tracking CAPA effectiveness

Q7. In terms of confidentiality, which responsibility applies to auditors?

  • Sharing sensitive findings publicly to improve transparency
  • Maintaining confidentiality of proprietary information and using findings only for audit purposes
  • Posting raw audit evidence on internal social media
  • Discussing findings with external suppliers before notifying management

Correct Answer: Maintaining confidentiality of proprietary information and using findings only for audit purposes

Q8. What is an auditee’s responsibility when a nonconformity is identified?

  • Concealing the issue until the next inspection
  • Implementing temporary fixes only, without root-cause investigation
  • Participating in root-cause analysis, proposing CAPAs, and providing evidence of implementation
  • Appealing to the auditor to downgrade the finding

Correct Answer: Participating in root-cause analysis, proposing CAPAs, and providing evidence of implementation

Q9. Who is responsible for ensuring auditor independence in internal audits?

  • The auditee’s immediate supervisor
  • The audit program owner or quality unit that assigns auditors and avoids conflicts of interest
  • The external regulatory inspector
  • The production manager of the audited area

Correct Answer: The audit program owner or quality unit that assigns auditors and avoids conflicts of interest

Q10. Which responsibility is critical when verifying the effectiveness of CAPAs?

  • Relying solely on verbal confirmation from staff that CAPA is complete
  • Scheduling an effectiveness check, reviewing objective evidence, and documenting outcomes
  • Assuming effectiveness if CAPA tasks are closed on time
  • Transferring CAPA responsibility to a different department without review

Correct Answer: Scheduling an effectiveness check, reviewing objective evidence, and documenting outcomes

Q11. What responsibility does a sponsor or contract giver hold during contract or supplier audits?

  • Assuming full operational control of the supplier’s processes
  • Defining audit expectations in the contract, reviewing supplier audit results, and ensuring corrective actions are implemented
  • Allowing the supplier to omit CAPA reporting
  • Certifying supplier compliance without evidence

Correct Answer: Defining audit expectations in the contract, reviewing supplier audit results, and ensuring corrective actions are implemented

Q12. Which responsibility pertains to documentation during the audit process?

  • Altering original records to match audit findings
  • Recording objective evidence, timestamps, interviewer names, and retaining records per policy
  • Removing confidential documents from the auditee after the audit
  • Leaving audit notes undocumented and relying on memory

Correct Answer: Recording objective evidence, timestamps, interviewer names, and retaining records per policy

Q13. What is the auditor’s responsibility when encountering a potential major nonconformity?

  • Ignoring it if time is limited
  • Escalating it to the lead auditor/management, documenting evidence thoroughly, and ensuring clear report wording
  • Classifying it as a minor observation to reduce impact
  • Allowing the auditee to rewrite procedures on the spot

Correct Answer: Escalating it to the lead auditor/management, documenting evidence thoroughly, and ensuring clear report wording

Q14. What responsibility does training play for audit team members?

  • Only new auditors require any training
  • All auditors must be trained in audit techniques, regulations, and the specific technical area being audited
  • Training is optional if auditors have industry experience
  • Auditors should train auditees on technical tasks during the audit

Correct Answer: All auditors must be trained in audit techniques, regulations, and the specific technical area being audited

Q15. In follow-up audits, what responsibility falls on the audit program owner?

  • Canceling previous findings if CAPA tasks show progress
  • Scheduling and verifying timely closure of actions, and ensuring the evidence demonstrates sustained corrective measures
  • Removing the original audit report from records
  • Allowing CAPA owners to self-certify closure without verification

Correct Answer: Scheduling and verifying timely closure of actions, and ensuring the evidence demonstrates sustained corrective measures

Q16. Which responsibility relates to the use of sampling during audits?

  • Auditors must inspect every single record regardless of scope
  • Designing a justified sampling approach and documenting rationale when full review is impractical
  • Sampling should be random without regard to risk or criticality
  • Sampling results should be hidden from management

Correct Answer: Designing a justified sampling approach and documenting rationale when full review is impractical

Q17. What responsibility does an auditor have regarding conflict of interest?

  • Auditors should audit areas where they have close personal involvement to improve insight
  • Declaring any potential conflicts and recusing themselves where impartiality may be compromised
  • Keeping conflicts of interest confidential to protect the audit schedule
  • Allowing personal relationships to influence classification of findings

Correct Answer: Declaring any potential conflicts and recusing themselves where impartiality may be compromised

Q18. When an external regulatory inspector requests audit records, who is responsible for providing them?

  • The auditor who performed the internal audit only
  • The quality unit, ensuring appropriate records are provided in accordance with regulations and confidentiality policies
  • The auditee’s line staff without oversight
  • Any employee who can access the files, without documentation

Correct Answer: The quality unit, ensuring appropriate records are provided in accordance with regulations and confidentiality policies

Q19. Which responsibility describes the distinction between an observation and a finding?

  • An observation requires immediate product recall
  • An observation indicates potential improvement or low-risk issue; a finding indicates nonconformity with formal criteria
  • There is no difference; both require the same CAPA timeline
  • An observation always triggers regulatory notification

Correct Answer: An observation indicates potential improvement or low-risk issue; a finding indicates nonconformity with formal criteria

Q20. What is the responsibility of the audit team concerning evidence quality?

  • Relying on hearsay and undocumented statements as primary evidence
  • Collecting objective, reproducible, and verifiable evidence; documenting source, date, and context
  • Allowing a single verbal confirmation to replace documentary proof
  • Using evidence only if it supports a pre-determined conclusion

Correct Answer: Collecting objective, reproducible, and verifiable evidence; documenting source, date, and context

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