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Ed's avatar

A good stong postmarket surveillance system is how we make sure our medical devices are performing as designed and cleared by the regulatory agencies. In Europe, the MDR and IVDR both have revised their postmarket systems to become stronger and give early signals of problems. In the US FDA has long had systems in place and knows that they are not receiving all the information FDA needs to make sure the regulatory systems are functioning as designed.

However, more important is that the devices we design and sell provide the expected benefit to the patient and do not harm anyone, especially the patient, but also anyone that comes in contact with the device or its byproducts.

Two standards, ISO 13485:2016 Clause 8 and ISO 14971:2020 Clause 10, that both were developed from the same root, the GHTF CAPA guidance SG3:N18:2010, have requirements to provide postmarket information to regulatory agencies derived from the surveillance systems the manufacturer has actively collected, processed, and responded to the signals from the information.

As is pointed out in Naveen's article, the industry needs to improve our capabilities in monitoring, analyzing, and taking action on the postmarket information. Just this week, FDA posted another Warning Letter (Olympus) to a company that has clearly failed in its responsibilities. If you do not file based on clear signals in your data, yo might find your self in the same place as Olympus. Their reputation is besmirched and patients have been harmed because the company did not adequately review the data they had and take required action.

FDA will issue Warning Letters if you don't have a procedure for postmarket reporting that shows up during an investigation of your foreign facility. If your procedure is inadequate and results in poor reporting of incidents for any facility, that could probably lead to a Warning Letter.

Your customers will learn of a Warning Letter issued to your company from your competitor's sales force "faster than a speeding bullet" as the TV series used to say. You will have a hard time digging out of the reputation damage.

The product liability attorneys will be filing court cases that are very costly, and they will subpoena your risk management file and your design files as well as your production files. It will cost lots of money, time, and effort. A lot more money, time and effort than if you had done it right in the first place.

Pay attention to this article and improve your postmarket surveillance systems and use them to improve products, especially product safety!

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Steve Silverman's avatar

Naveen,

This article is brilliant. It will be fascinating to see how much quality activity is driven by customer demand, irrespective of regulator oversight. Kudos!

Steve

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