The U.S. FDA released a draft guidance for computer software assurance, a document that spells out the agency’s expectations for computer systems used to log a manufacturing site’s compliance and manufacturing activities.
The toxicity associated with oncology therapies is the stuff of legend with clinicians and patients, and thus the U.S. FDA and manufacturers have been working to fine tune these dosing regimens. However, the FDA's Oncology Center of Excellence (OCE) includes a programmatic effort to optimize dosing regimens, which led to an editorial by FDA officials that calls on industry to consider whether the maximum tolerated dose paradigm is really the optimal approach to oncology drug development.
The casual observer may be inclined to think that the European Union’s Medical Device Regulation (MDR) is off to a rocky start, but those whose livelihoods are at stake have a more intimate view of the situation. An attendee at a Sept. 12 session at this year’s Regulatory Convergence lamented what she believes is a dismal outlook for EU patients and device makers in the coming year, a testimonial that drew cheers and applause from those in attendance.
U.S. FDA commissioner Robert Califf resurrected a litany of complaints about medical product misinformation, including vaccinations for the COVID-19 pandemic, in a televised presentation heard by attendees at the Regulatory Affairs Professional Society (RAPS) annual conference here in Phoenix, where the daytime high temperatures are hovering at or near the century mark.
The U.S. FDA has advised the public that it is in possession of 10 reports of squamous cell carcinoma and 12 reports of various lymphomas in connection with breast implants, a series of findings that are separate from known incidents of lymphoma.
Angioplasty and stenting have combined to become the standard of care for patients with myocardia that sustained damage due to an infarct, but a new study suggests that some of these patients are no worse off with medical management compared to a trip to the cath lab.
The litigation over the fraud perpetrated by Theranos Inc. and its executives is still legally relevant, but another Silicon Valley company and its founder have been indicted over misrepresentations to investors over liquid biopsy technologies that were purported to work with just a few drops of blood. A jury recently convicted Mark Schena, the president of Palo Alto-Calif.-based Arrayit Corp., of defrauding investors and causing false claims to be submitted to federal health programs, another example of how investors can be easily misled by hucksters plying the diagnostics trade.
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is still widely seen as the most common cause of irreversible blindness in those aged 50 and older, but the U.S. NIH and two partners from the private sector believe they have a solution. The three have teamed up to develop a patch embedded with induced pluripotent stem cells that has been implanted in a patient in the U.S. for the first time, marking the commencement of a safety study that may help take a bite out of the $4.6 billion in direct medical spending on AMD each year in the U.S.
The U.S. FDA’s formation of the Digital Health Center of Excellence was heralded as a key enabler of digital health technologies, but the news hasn’t necessarily had the expected effect. The agency’s December 2021 draft guidance on the use of digital health technologies to assist in the conduct of clinical trials is still in regulatory drydock.
An administrative law judge has decreed that the acquisition of Grail Inc., by Illumina Inc., would not represent a suppression of competition in the market for multicancer early detection (MCED) tests, clearing a way for an acquisition that was initially valued at more than $7 billion.