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Ed. Note: The following is a press
release from the Institute of Medicine.
July 18, 2005 -
According to Food and Drug Administration (FDA), some 80,000 medical devices
are marketed in the United States, ranging from those as simple as plastic
tubing and baby bottle nipples to others as complex as pacemakers or
cerebrospinal fluid shunts. Although low-risk devices like plastic tubing
need not be evaluated by FDA before going to market, between 55 percent and
60 percent of all devices are considered to be higher risk and require
agency review before they can enter the market.
In this IOM study, sponsored by the FDA, the committee was charged with
evaluating FDA's postmarket surveillance of medical devices used with
children specifically.
The committee found that the FDA lacks effective procedures to monitor the
status of safety studies of medical devices and recommended that Congress
ensure that the agency establishes a reliable system to track these
postmarket studies. The committee also recommended that the information
collected by this system be made available to patients, health care
providers, and researchers in a format that allows users to find studies
that look at studies involving children.
Additionally, the committee found that it was difficult to reliably identify
postmarket studies that considered pediatric issues or focused on children.
The report recommends that the current 3-year limit on the length of studies
ordered after a device is marketed be lifted for appropriate studies
involving the effects of children's growth and development. Because children
represent a small market for devices, imposing requirements on manufacturers
to conduct studies examining their use in pediatric patients could inhibit
the development of new equipment for children, the committee acknowledged.
The report also recommended that FDA, the National Institutes of Health, and
others set priorities for research on unanswered questions about the safe
use of devices with children.
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