The U.S. FDA literally wasted no time in posting twin warning letters to two companies in China that manufacture syringes that were the subjects of multiple recalls in the U.S.
The U.S. FDA cited Criticare Technologies Inc. for significant lapses in the company’s corrective and preventive action procedures, which suggests a need for outside certification of compliance because this problem was also observed in a warning letter from 2017.
The U.S. FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health has rewired its organizational structure on several fronts, including a promotion of its communication function into a “super office,” which the agency said will help it be more agile and responsive to its strategic priorities.
A dongle is not the sort of thing one typically associates with a medical device, but a charging dongle used with the Baxter Healthcare Life2000 ventilator has triggered a recall of both the dongle and the ventilator.
A committee of the U.S. House of Representatives proposed an FDA discretionary spending bill of less than $26 billion in appropriated taxpayer dollars for fiscal year 2025.
The U.S. FDA’s final guidance for device-based treatments for opioid use disorder breaks little new ground relative to the 2023 draft, including a call for the use of a randomized, controlled clinical trial that retains blinding of not just enrollees, but also of the clinicians taking part in these studies.
In an action two years in the making, Dublin-based Medtronic plc withdrew a series of endotracheal tubes because of complaints of lost functionality that carries the risk of respiratory and/or cardiac arrest.
Pulse Biosciences Inc. received U.S. FDA breakthrough device designation for its Cellfx cardiac surgery system with surgical clamp for ablation of atrial fibrillation. The Cellfx system uses nanosecond pulsed field ablation technology to deliver durable, continuous transmural ablation.
The U.S. FDA warning letter to AG Essence Inc., a maker of wound care products, raised the question of whether the the company’s Banda product line is a drug or a device, although the FDA’s device center was the issuer of the warning letter. However, the company told ioWorld that it sees its offerings as homeopathic products rather than as drugs or devices, suggesting that this product jurisdiction scrum is far from over.
Bob Califf, commissioner of the U.S. FDA, has been laser-focused on misinformation recently, and the agency reissued a 2014 draft guidance that describes an enforcement policy about third-party communications about a drug or device. The draft appears to sidestep at least one major problem with the 2014 edition, but seems to suggest that manufacturers should consider addressing misinformation about an entire class of products.