How to Build a Method Operable Design Region (MODR): From Guesswork to Control

🔑 Key Takeaways

  • MODR defines the safe space where your method delivers consistent, high-quality results.
  • It replaces guesswork with confidence by using data, not opinion.
  • Creating a MODR helps you defend your method against variation, transfer failures, and audits.
  • This blog walks you through MODR step-by-step with a real example, checklist, and visual flow.

🎯 The Punchline

Think of MODR as your method’s “comfort zone” — a scientifically proven range where it works reliably, even if small changes happen.

In traditional method development, you pick one set of conditions. You validate that.
Then you hope everything else holds steady.

In AQbD, you design a region, not a point.
This region — the MODR â€” gives you flexibility, robustness, and control.

🚨 The Problem with Point-Based Methods

Without MODR, your method might:

  • Work perfectly during validation
  • Fail during tech transfer
  • Fall apart after a column lot change or minor pH drift

Why? Because the method was designed as a fixed point â€” not a robust region.

🧠 The Solution: Design a Method Operable Design Region (MODR)

MODR = the multidimensional range of method parameters where performance stays within predefined acceptance criteria.

It’s built using DOE (Design of Experiments) and guided by:

  • Your ATP
  • Defined CQAs
  • Key CMPs

🧪 Real Example: HPLC Assay for a Heat-Sensitive Compound

You’re building an HPLC method to quantify a drug that degrades with heat and low pH.

Your CQAs:

  • Peak area %RSD < 2%
  • Resolution from degradation peak > 1.5

Your CMPs:

  • Flow rate
  • Column temperature
  • Mobile phase pH

Step 1: Define Ranges

You select ranges based on prior knowledge:

  • Flow: 0.8–1.2 mL/min
  • Temp: 25–40°C
  • pH: 3.0–4.5

Step 2: Design a DOE

Use a 3-factor, 3-level full factorial or central composite design.
You collect responses for:

  • Resolution
  • Peak shape
  • Retention time
  • %RSD
Flow Rate (mL/min)Temperature pHResolutionTailing Factor%RSD
0.825.03.01.961.131.74
0.825.03.752.181.021.74
0.825.04.51.961.131.74
0.825.03.02.261.131.24
0.832.53.752.481.021.24

We used a 3-factor, 3-level full factorial DOE (Flow Rate, Temperature, pH) to study their impact on Resolution, Tailing Factor, and %RSD.

Out of 27 combinations, 4 met all CQA criteria: Resolution ≥ 2.0, Tailing ≤ 1.5, %RSD ≤ 2.0.

This visual highlights the operating region (MODR) where all method performance criteria are met — showing flexibility, not just a fixed setting.

Step 3: Analyze the Data

You build models showing how each factor affects CQAs.
Then you identify regions where all CQAs meet acceptance.

Step 4: Define the MODR

From the model, you define:

  • Flow: 0.9–1.1 mL/min
  • Temp: 28–36°C
  • pH: 3.4–4.2

This is your MODR â€” the method will remain valid if operated within this region.

📌 Checklist: MODR in Practice

✅ StepDescription
Define ATP, CQAs, and CMPsWhat does the method need to achieve?
Select parameter rangesUse prior knowledge and risk assessment
Design DOEChoose the right experimental design
Model responsesIdentify interactions and critical thresholds
Confirm regionDefine the proven space for robust performance

🧰 Actionable Steps for Your Lab

✅ 1. Start with risk ranked CMPs

Only include factors that impact CQAs

✅ 2. Use a statistical DOE tool

JMP, Minitab, or Design-Expert work well

✅ 3. Validate inside your MODR

Use confirmatory runs in the defined space

✅ 4. Document your MODR

Include in your method file or validation protocol

🧩 Closing

In AQbD, a method is more than just what works today.
It’s a system designed to work tomorrow — in new labs, with new analysts, under new conditions.

The MODR gives you that flexibility.
Instead of building brittle methods, you build ones that bend — and don’t break. Build a region, not a point.
That’s how AQbD wins.

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