New guidance on regulatory pathways for personalized medical devices
International Medical Devices Regulators Forum releases final guidance document
The International Medical Device Regulators Forum (IMDRF) is a voluntary group of medical device regulators from around the world. They have recently issued a final guidance document - Personalized Medical Devices – Regulatory Pathways. The purpose of the guidance is to:
- recommend a harmonized approach for the application of existing regulatory requirements for medical devices that are intended for a particular individual; and,
- identify special considerations for the regulation of identified categories of personalized medical device.
This guidance also provides an overview of considerations and concepts that could be relevant in developing a harmonised assessment approach in future.
Many jurisdictions define the term custom-made device. Custom-made devices are intended:
- for the sole use of a particular individual; and,
- to be made in accordance with a written request of an authorized healthcare professional; and,
- to address specific anatomo-physiological features or pathological condition of the individual for whom it is intended.
The regulatory requirements have introduced exemptions for regulating custom-made medical devices in order to cover situations where commercially available devices are inadequate for the needs and requirements of a particular individual. These exemptions have been based on premises that affected devices would:
- be used only in special cases and so the numbers of manufactured custom-made devices would be low; and,
- largely comprise low-risk products or limited use of higher-risk implantable devices.
However, technological development has meant that it is now possible to manufacture individualized medical devices in a completely different manner from the skilled, manual processes that were originally envisaged. Computer-controlled additive and subtractive manufacturing methods (often called 3-D printing) can be used to create personalized medical devices based on digital patient data, potentially with the manufacturing activity undertaken at the point-of-care. Growing numbers of patients are receiving these medical devices to meet their particular needs.
This recent guidance builds on a previous IMDRF document Definitions for Personalized Medical Devices. As well as custom-made medical device, the additional terms patient-matched and ‘adaptable’ medical device are introduced. These devices are designed and produced under the responsibility of a manufacturer, where:
- adaptable medical devices are mass-produced and adapted, shaped or assembled at the point-of care in accordance with specific patient’s specific anatomo-physiologic features following the manufacturer’s instructions; whereas,
- patient-matched medical devices are scaled within a specified design window using anatomic references or anatomical features from patient imaging.
The guidance document gives a flowchart describing how to classify a device into these three categories of personalized medical devices. It provides recommendations for custom-made, patient-matched and adaptable medical devices. Two annexes provide considerations for personalized devices:
- produced using additive or subtractive manufacturing; and,
- manufactured at point-of care.
This guidance will be relevant to manufacturers producing personalized medical devices or looking into additive or subtractive manufacturing technology or point-of-care manufacturing.
Author: Eamonn Hoxey, of E V Hoxey Ltd, UK, is a writer, trainer and consultant on a range of life science areas including regulatory compliance, quality management, sterility assurance and standards development
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