After flying high in 2022, digital therapeutics (DTx) companies crashed to Earth in 2023 and scrambled to identify a path to profitability, or at least continued viability.
Huma Therapeutics Ltd. received the first EU Class IIb approval for a software as a medical device (SaMD) product, winning the certification for its system for collecting and analysing patient data across multiple disease indications, the company reported. The approval will open up the market for digital health apps, with customers now able to link into Huma’s underlying technical platform to develop their own digital health apps and companion diagnostics, avoiding the need to then get their own, separate EU medical device certification.
In what is claimed as the largest study of how digital technologies were applied to support population level research during the pandemic, scientists at the U.K. Medical Research Council’s epidemiology unit at Cambridge University have reported high, sustained levels of engagement in a fully remote COVID-19 study that ran at a time when visits to a study center were not possible.
Astrazeneca plc is selling its disease management platform Amaze to U.K. digital therapeutics company Huma Therapeutics Ltd. through a new collaboration agreement. The companies said they will work together to launch Software as a Medical Device (SaMD) companion apps for several therapeutic areas and accelerate adoption of decentralized clinical trials (DCTs). The partnership marks Astrazeneca’s first major deal in the digital health space.