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BioWorld - Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Home » Topics » Medical technology, Regulatory

Medical technology, Regulatory
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CDC headquarters

US CDC nomination withdrawn, reforms in the works

March 13, 2025
By Mari Serebrov
Shortly before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee was to hold the first ever confirmation hearing for a U.S. CDC director March 13, it issued a statement saying the hearing was canceled due to the White House withdrawing its nomination of Dave Weldon, a physician and former congressman from Florida.
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FDA icons and doctor

AMP says FDA asks too much of test validation in Section 564 draft

March 13, 2025
By Mark McCarty
The U.S. FDA’s January 2025 draft guidance for test validation in public health emergencies drew only six responses, but pointed responses they were, indeed. As an example, the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) said the draft’s recommendation for the use of 30 positive and 30 negative (30/30) samples for validation of lab-developed tests is likely to hamper test availability in an emergent situation, a time when samples are likely to be difficult to obtain.
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Document illustration

US NIH grant peer review to get a bit of a makeover

March 12, 2025
By Mari Serebrov
Looking to shave $65 million from its annual expenditures while streamlining the first stage of its two-level grant review process, the U.S. NIH is proposing to centralize the peer review of all applications for grants, cooperative agreements and R&D contracts within its Center for Scientific Review.
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Hospital patient wearing pulse oximeter

ISO, IEC advise against simplistic approaches to pulse ox performance

March 12, 2025
By Mark McCarty
The U.S. FDA’s latest draft guidance on pulse oximeters drew comment from the International Standards Organization and the International Electrotechnical Commission, which are making the case that in addition to differences in pigmentation, the pulsatility of the tissue in contact with the device is also a factor in device performance.
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Lungs and bronchiole

CMS eyes ventilation coverage for beneficiaries with COPD

March 12, 2025
By Mark McCarty
Medicare beneficiaries in the U.S. diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) may soon be covered for positive pressure ventilation in the home per a draft coverage memo from CMS.
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Gavel and scales

Clinical trial fraud ends with guilty pleas

March 11, 2025
By Mari Serebrov
In another real-life episode of “sponsor beware,” the owners of a clinical research facility pleaded guilty March 10 in U.S. district court to fraud charges resulting from their conduct of two clinical trials for potential asthma drugs.
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Sooma device with laptop

Sooma receives IDE for neurostimulation therapy for depression

March 11, 2025
By Shani Alexander
Sooma Oy secured U.S. FDA investigational device exemption approval to initiate a pivotal study of its transcranial direct current stimulation medical device in people with major depressive disorder. The study will examine the efficacy of the non-invasive Sooma 2Gen device in improving MDD as an at-home treatment.
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Researcher looking through a microscope

NIH changes set industry up for workforce, ideas drought

March 7, 2025
By Anette Breindl
On March 1, 2025, former NIH director Francis Collins’ announced that he had fully resigned from the NIH, where he continued to lead a laboratory after his resignation as director. Collins gave no reason for his resignation, but it comes just before this week’s confirmation hearings for Jay Bhattacharya, who is U.S. President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the NIH and who Collins called a “fringe epidemiologist” during the COVID pandemic. It is a bitter irony that when Collins resigned as NIH director in 2021, then-President Joe Biden said that “countless researchers will aspire to follow in his footsteps.”
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NHS building

New AI fall prediction tool being rolled out across the NHS

March 7, 2025
By Shani Alexander
The U.K.’s national health service (NHS) is rolling out a new artificial intelligence (AI)-powered tool which can predict a patient’s risk of falling with a 97% accuracy rate. The AI software designed by Cera Care Ltd. is already in use in more than two-thirds of NHS integrated care systems across the country and NHS England hopes that the tool will prevent around 2,000 falls and hospital admissions each day.
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Map of Europe, Medical Device Regulation (MDR) text

EU MDR backlog could create an opportunity for Australia

March 7, 2025
By Tamra Sami
A slow-down in EU medical device audits due to the long-delayed transition to the EU Medical Device Regulation is leading to increased applications to Australia as small businesses bypass Europe altogether.
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