The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ years-long musing over a streamlined coverage policy specifically for breakthrough medical devices is now taking a toll on breakthrough medications that could provide a cure or arrest the progression of debilitating diseases.
The U.S. FDA has wrapped up its guidance effort to deal with counterfeit devices, an effort that consumed roughly 11 months. That span of time had little discernible effect on the draft, however, as the final guidance seems to leave the draft’s explanation that future FDA guidances may refer to more than one section of the statute in references to the definition of a device.
Med tech firms are becoming quite familiar with the world of digital health in recent years, but this has often been a pairing of strange bedfellows at best up to now. A new report by Accenture on industry adoption of digital health lays out some of the reasons for that, but some impediments come from government, such as the lag in development of regulatory policies for artificial intelligence (AI) and software as a medical device (SaMD).
Australia’s TGA has opened a consultation on drug-device combination products to help sponsors understand the regulatory pathway through which their products will likely pass since these combination products may not fit within existing definitions for drugs, biologicals or medical devices.
Australia’s TGA has opened a consultation on drug-device combination products to help sponsors understand the regulatory pathway through which their products will likely pass since these combination products may not fit within existing definitions for drugs, biologicals or medical devices.
The U.S. FDA granted Preceptis Inc. an expanded clearance for its Hummingbird Tympanostomy Tube System for office-based pediatric ear tube procedures. The device was previously cleared in children 6-24 months, but the new clearance allows in-office procedures in all children six months and older. The minimally invasive device is designed to create an incision so the ear tube can be delivered using a single pass down the ear canal, without the use of general anesthesia.
The U.S. FDA’s efforts to improve medical device quality includes a recent draft guidance that pertains to the pilot version of a voluntary improvement program, but stakeholders see a number of critical issues with the draft. A coalition of device makers said this pilot program should include disclosure guardrails that parallel similar guardrails provided for medical device reports (MDRs), a provision related to discovery during product liability litigation that is seen as critical if device makers are to take part in the voluntary improvement pilot.
Device servicing by third parties has been topical of late, although not in the context of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) systems. That seems likely to change thanks to the ongoing recall of CPAP machines made by Philips Respironics Inc., of Murrysville, Pa., which was driven by reports of degradation of foam used in the device for insulation.
The U.S. FDA reported a proposed down-classification for two device types intended for detection of melanoma, a move that would ease the premarket path for similar devices. The agency noted that it has received only one PMA application each for optical diagnostic devices and electrical impedance spectrometers, which suggests the agency sees these device types as suffering for want of interest on the part of device makers.