Paper
6 December 1994 Problems caused by regulatory delays and regulation
Glenn Pelikan
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 2307, Health Care Technology Policy I: The Role of Technology in the Cost of Health Care; (1994) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.195460
Event: The Role of Technology in the Cost of Health Care, 1994, Arlington, VA, United States
Abstract
The focus of FDA regulation on medical devices has changed substantially since its beginning in 1976. The earliest focus of GMP inspections was education of both the Industry and the Agency. Approval of new products through the 510K Premarket Notification process was generally achieved within the regulatory intended time of ninety days. Agency evaluation of 510K applications was focused on comparison to approved devices. All this has changed. The focus of GMP inspection today is enforcement. Sometimes that enforcement is targeted and sometimes it is arbitrary and capricious. Companies have been shut down and warning letters are now frequent. Some of this focus change has been warranted. Industry has been slow in its efforts to become fully GMP compliant. Approvals of 510K’s are taking much longer. The FDA’s backlog is now one year. The number of submissions has not grown substantially in the last few years, rather the process has become much slower. The amount of detail requested has, in some cases, exceeded any reasonable expectation I might have had. Current trends, if continued, represent a threat to an innovative and competitive Device Industry. Current trends are explored and changes recommended to bring about a better balance between the Agency and the Industry. The focus of FDA regulation on medical devices has changed substantially since its beginning in 1976. The earliest focus of GMP inspections was education of both the Industry and the Agency. Approval of new products through the 510K Premarket Notification process was generally achieved within the regulatory intended time of ninety days. Agency evaluation of 510K applications was focused on comparison to approved devices.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Glenn Pelikan "Problems caused by regulatory delays and regulation", Proc. SPIE 2307, Health Care Technology Policy I: The Role of Technology in the Cost of Health Care, (6 December 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.195460
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KEYWORDS
Inspection

Manufacturing

Medicine

Safety

Medical devices

Calibration

Clinical trials

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