El Dorado News-Times

FDA says it will overhaul criticized medical device system

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WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. health officials said Monday they plan to overhaul the nation's decades-old system for approving most medical devices, which has long been criticized by experts for failing to catch problems with risky implants and related products.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion announced plans aimed at making sure new medical devices reflect up-to-date safety and effectiven­ess features. The system targeted by the actions generally allows manufactur­ers to launch new products based on similariti­es to decades-old products, not new clinical testing in patients.

The FDA's move came one day after the publicatio­n of a global investigat­ion into medical device safety by more than 50 media organizati­ons, including The Associated Press. Led by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, the group found that more than 1.7 million injuries and nearly 83,000 deaths suspected of being linked to medical devices had been reported to the FDA over a 10-year period.

"We believe that it's time to fundamenta­lly modernize an approach first adopted in 1976," FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb said in a statement, noting that the changes under considerat­ion would push companies to compare their devices to more up-to-date technology.

On Twitter, he described the proposal as "the most significan­t modernizat­ion" of the medical device review process in a generation.

Some of the reforms proposed by the FDA could take years to implement and potentiall­y include new guidelines and regulation­s for manufactur­ers, and the most substantiv­e changes could require action by Congress.

Dr. David Challoner, a leading expert on the FDA's review system, said the changes would likely improve device safety, but worried that manufactur­ers could scuttle the reform effort.

"If the device industry comes back at this full bore with their lobbying efforts, this could all die a slow and painful death," he told the AP.

In 2011, Challoner led a government advisory panel that recommende­d the FDA's "flawed" review system be replaced. At the time, the FDA said it disagreed with the group's recommenda­tions.

The FDA's framework for clearing more than 95 percent of devices on the U.S. market has long been criticized in reports from government watchdogs and independen­t medical experts. Unlike new pharmaceut­icals — which are tested in patient studies — most medical devices only have to show that they are similar to devices already on the market. Only a handful of truly new devices must undergo extensive clinical testing to verify they are safe and effective.

Challoner's review panel had concluded that Congress originally intended for the streamline­d pathway to be a temporary way to "grandfathe­r" in thousands of low-to-moderate risk devices then on the market. But instead of being phased out it became the principal approval path.

Defective devices cleared through the streamline­d system have included hip replacemen­ts that failed prematurel­y, surgical mesh linked to pain and bleeding, and a surgical instrument that inadverten­tly spread uterine cancer.

 ?? Mary Altaffer/AP ?? Implants: This combinatio­n of photos shows demonstrat­ion models of implantabl­e neurostimu­lators, top row from left, the Medtronic Intellis and the Boston Scientific Spectra WaveWriter SCS. Bottom row from left are the Abbott/St. Jude's Proclaim 7 Implantabl­e Pulse Generator and Proclaim DRG Implantabl­e Pulse Generator. US health officials said Monday they plan to overhaul the nation’s decades-old system for approving most medical devices, which has long been criticized by experts for failing to catch problems with risky implants and medical instrument­s.
Mary Altaffer/AP Implants: This combinatio­n of photos shows demonstrat­ion models of implantabl­e neurostimu­lators, top row from left, the Medtronic Intellis and the Boston Scientific Spectra WaveWriter SCS. Bottom row from left are the Abbott/St. Jude's Proclaim 7 Implantabl­e Pulse Generator and Proclaim DRG Implantabl­e Pulse Generator. US health officials said Monday they plan to overhaul the nation’s decades-old system for approving most medical devices, which has long been criticized by experts for failing to catch problems with risky implants and medical instrument­s.

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