FDA Schedules Public Meeting On Premarket Clearance Process For Medical Devices

The U.S. announced today that it has scheduled a public meeting on Feb. 18, 2010, to discuss related to the , or 510(k) process, used to review and clear certain marketed in the United States. The receives more than 3,000 510(k) submissions each year.

The public notice for the meeting will appear in the Jan. 27, 2010 .

In September 2009, the agency announced it had asked the (IOM) to conduct a comprehensive study of the process. The is not expected to conclude until March 2011.

In the meantime, the has convened its own internal to evaluate and improve the quality and of the agency’s decision-making in the 510(k) process as well as its administration of the program. The February meeting will support the efforts of the agency’s internal .

“It’s been more than 30 years since the establishment of the process for ,” said Jeffrey Shuren, M.D., J.D., director of for Devices and Radiological Health. “We are looking forward to hearing from the public on issues related to this program to help us improve it.”

At the meeting, staff will present a brief overview of the challenges the agency has faced, organized in four categories: issues related to predicate devices, which are previously cleared devices that may support a manufacturer’s claim of ; issues related to new technologies and scientific evidence; issues related to practices the has adopted in response to a of submissions; and issues related to postmarket and new information about marketed devices.

Each of the four will be followed by an open comment session. The meeting will close with a public roundtable discussion between staff and selected participants representing a range of .

The Feb. 18 meeting will run from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at the Hilton Washington, D.C./North Gaithersburg, in Gaithersburg, Md. Those interested in attending or participating in the meeting must register by 5 p.m. on Feb. 12, 2010. The agency is accepting written or electronic comments by March 5, 2010.

The meeting will be Webcast live at http://www.ConnectLive.com/events/fda021810.

The 510(k) process was established under the Medical Device Amendments of 1976 to achieve two goals:

- Make safe and effective devices available to consumers; and
- Promote innovation in the medical device industry.

During the past three decades, technology and the medical device industry have changed dramatically, making it an appropriate time for the to review the adequacy of the program in meeting these two goals. The classifies into three categories according to their level of risk. Class III devices represent the highest level of risk and generally require premarket approval to support their safety and effectiveness before they may be marketed. Class III devices include heart valves and intraocular lenses.

Class I and Class II devices pose lower risks and include devices such as adhesive bandages and wheelchairs. Most Class II devices and some Class I devices can only be marketed after the has found them to be substantially equivalent to legally marketed devices that do not require premarket approval, based on ’s review of submitted premarket notifications-also called 510(k) applications.

Devices that are not found by the to be substantially equivalent to a legally marketed device, such as those with a new intended use or that have different technological characteristics that raise different questions of safety and effectiveness, require premarket approval.

For more information

FDA’s Website on Premarket Notification (510k)

Institute of Medicine to Study Premarket Clearance Process for Medical Devices FDA News Release: Sept. 23, 2009

Source
U.S.

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