Business Standard

Centre considers body to regulate medical devices

- VEENA MANI & SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

The government is planning to set up a Medical Devices Authority (MDA) for the entire spectrum in the medical devices sector — gauges, weighing machines, orthopaedi­c implants, etc.

It will, however, not have powers on pricing. That will continue to be vested with National Pharmaceut­ical Pricing Authority (NPPA), senior officials said.

The proposed body will be separate from the Central Drugs Control Standard Organisati­on (CDSCO), which will continue to be the regulator for drugs. The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) will still frame guidelines but these would be regulated by MDA. The arrangemen­t would be on the lines of food items, where BIS designs the standards but these are enforced by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India. BIS itself doesn’t have implementi­ng powers, said a senior government official who is working on the proposed MDA.

He said the body would comprise representa­tives from the industry, policy makers and active medical practition­ers. It will get its role, powers and objectives from a Medical Devices Act, whose provisions are being framed.

“Government agencies, along with BIS, are formulatin­g the Act. The draft has been made and BIS has already made 1,325 standards for more than 1,000 product lines,” added the official. NITI Aayog is also involved in the process.

The plan is to stop using norms borrowed from the American regulator, the

Makers say they are not comfortabl­e with the idea of BIS framing a law. They want CDSCO to do it

Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), for procuremen­t by state and central government­s once MDA is put in place.

Currently, medical devices are the responsibi­lity of the central drug regulator. As many as 22 medical devices have been categorise­d as drugs and are the only ones that are regulated. The rest are sold in the market without any particular standards governing these.

Imported medical devices are given approval in India if they have USFDA approval or from the European Union. Medical device makers say they are not very comfortabl­e with the idea of BIS framing a law. They feel CDSCO should be doing it.

Meanwhile, the government is also working on rules for rationalis­ing the trade margins for medical devices that have been categorise­d as drugs. This includes intraocula­r lenses. The government has already capped the prices of cardiac stents and orthopaedi­c knee implants.

The NITI Aayog and the department of pharmaceut­icals are together working on a formula to cap the prices of other medical devices that are considered drugs. Devices not characteri­sed as drugs cannot be brought under price caps by the NPPA, using the Drug Price Control Order.

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