lunes, 4 de abril de 2016

Planning Board Releases Report on a National Evaluation System

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Establishing a national evaluation system for medical devices is one of CDRH’s 2016-2017 strategic priorities. A national evaluation system is a collaborative system that monitors, links, and analyzes real-world data from many different sources—including clinical registries, electronic health records and medical billing claims— across the medical device landscape with the goal of better understanding how medical devices perform. By harnessing such real-world data using state-of-the-art techniques, such a system will provide information that not only contributes to regulatory decisions, but also promotes device innovation, and importantly provides timely and meaningful information directly to patients and their physicians.
Today, as an outcome of a cooperative agreement with FDA1, the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy published its vision on a coordinating center for such a system. "Better Evidence on Medical Devices: A Coordinating Center for a 21st Century National Medical Device Evaluation System" describes expectations for a national evaluation system’s Coordinating Center (you may recall that the planning board called for a Coordinating Center in its February 2015, “Strengthening Patient Care: Building a National Postmarket Medical Device Surveillance System”). The Coordinating Center will guide the future development and implementation of a national system.
Today’s publication is an important step toward building a national evaluation system. For more information about a national evaluation system, please visit the FDA’s National Evaluation System webpage.

Thank you,
Food and Drug Administration
Center for Devices and Radiological Health

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