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BioWorld - Sunday, April 26, 2026
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Top Five Things to Watch for in 2011

Aug. 31, 2011
By Mark McCarty
In the world of diagnostic and therapeutic devices, 2011 has already been a busy year, but a third of the year remains. There are still numerous developments that will trigger cheer and jeers, depending on where you sit. This is not an exhaustive list of things that could arise in the last half of this year, but these are all pretty big, and a lot of people will be watching carefully. FDA meeting on IOM 510(k) report: FDA recently invited all interested parties to talk about the recommendations made recently by the Institute of Medicine regarding the 510(k) device clearance...
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Flashback: Three med-tech stories from August 2009

Aug. 29, 2011
By Mark McCarty
Those in the business of therapeutic or diagnostic devices know how quickly things can change, so let's take a quick look at a few stories that appeared in Medical Device Daily in August 2009. After all, two years are less than the average time needed to get a patent through the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, which is another story. Aug. 12, 2009: Schultz out at CDRH; Shuren to serve as interim director On Aug. 11, 2009, the Internet was abuzz with reports that Dan Schultz, MD, had stepped...
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Trade Associations are life jackets for med-tech in age of uncertainty

Aug. 13, 2011
By Omar Ford
Tuesday night during its quarterly meeting, the Southeastern Medical Device Association (SEMDA; Norcross, Georgia) unveiled its new logo and its new website, which is set to go live in the very near future. SEMDA seems to be increasing its presence and that’s a good thing because it and other trade associations are going to play a very important role in helping med-tech companies traverse the healthcare landscape in the near future. And med-tech companies are going to need it. The upcoming changes set to take place on the healthcare landscape are going to have a dramatic impact on med-tech companies...
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Medtronic's $2.5M InFuse fix: Off-label use + implant = headaches

Aug. 5, 2011
By Mark McCarty
The deal struck by Medtronic (Fridley, Minnesota) regarding an evaluation of adverse events associated with off-label use of the InFuse bone morphogenic protein is conspicuous, but not so much because it will cost the firm $2.5 million to have Yale University (New Haven, Connecticut) review the data, as reported in the Aug. 5 edition of Medical Device Daily. As described by MDD managing editor Holland Johnson, this effort will be made very public and is being touted as a new level of transparency that may set the standard for future such activities. In the meantime, however, it might be enough...
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Device user fee discussions heading nowhere fast

July 29, 2011
By Mark McCarty
If you enjoy participating vicariously in exercises in futility, take a gander at what's going on in Washington with regard to user fees for medical device reviews. Yesterday, Sen. Richard Burr (R-North Carolina) told FDA commish Margaret Hamburg, MD, than any user fee legislation that does not incorporate non-FDA days into the calculation of total 510(k) review days would face “a long and laborious process” to get the required legislation through the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Burr's position was essentially that FDA has not met the turn-around on applications called for in the previous user fee handshake,...
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The runaway train: Conventional thinking about NIH funding

July 18, 2011
By Mark McCarty
In this blog, we've explored the issue of NIH funding twice. The first time, we examined the reported fiscal spending numbers (here) and the second time, we examined funding by program areas (here), but now we have the budget/deficit ceiling debate, and yet we still see examples of truly nonsensical arguments about NIH funding. Let's acknowledge at least one thing: It makes no sense to fatten the NIH basic research pipeline when we know FDA can never keep up with it. It's akin to putting up a larger water...
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All Aboard: Medical Device Daily's Wayback Machine is Here

July 11, 2011
By Mark McCarty
I remember reruns of a cartoon about a character named Tooter Turtle, who was always appealing to Mr. Wizard to send him back in time for some form of jollies or other, and when the whole thing went south, Tooter would yell out, “help Mr. Wizarrrrrd!” At which point, Mr. Wizard would cluck about the futility of it all in his central European accent and bring Tooter back with the incantation, "drizzle, drazzle, druzzle, drome; time for zis one to come home." I never had any idea what that drizzle-drazzle stuff was all about, but it worked for Mr. Wizard....
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Oh brother, it's Big Brother

July 8, 2011
By Mark McCarty
There is an Irish aphorism which states: "Anything that keeps a politician humble is healthy for democracy." The same might be said of bureaucrats. What sometimes strikes me as odd is that you can easily find coverage of the miscues of corporate America, but few media outlets are as punctilious about reporting on government's ill-intended moves. Here, then, are five reasons to mistrust government at least as much as device makers. Five: The Thompson Memo In 2003, this memo directed federal prosecutors to offer leniency to a corporate defendant if the defendant was willing to waive attorney-client privilege and/or willing...
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When FDA and industry clash: media's prejudices

July 7, 2011
By Mark McCarty
First, just to let you know dear reader, this is a Casey Anthony-free blog posting. Those who are skeptical of the device industry in this world are legion, but there are a lot of reasons to cast the occasional baleful glance at government as well. What's interesting is how many in the media automatically assume that any clash between FDA and industry is necessarily the fault of industry. Case in point: I was at the American Diabetes Association annual scientific sessions about two weeks ago and had a conversation with another member of the press. She said more or less...
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Patent reform: All aboard, the train has left the station

June 21, 2011
By Mark McCarty
The U.S. House of Representatives is expecting a vote this week on its patent reform bill, but unlike passage of the Senate bill, the House bill has to deal with a potentially crippling conflict. This conflict was set up by the provision dealing with fees collected by the Patent and Trademark Office, which is on a collision course with the budget-cutting mood in the House. Another difference between the two bills is the inclusion of the prior user defense in the House bill, but I'm going to propose that the real question here is not whether the House and Senate...
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