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We’re excited to share insights on mastering safety and performance criteria for medical devices. These criteria and clinical claims form the backbone of your review strategy, so getting them right the first time is crucial.
Safety and performance endpoints are pivotal in substantiating your medical device’s capabilities while ensuring its safety. These endpoints are essential for meeting the General Safety and Performance Requirements (GSPRs) required for clinical evaluations.
Performance refers to a device’s ability to achieve its intended purpose, leading to a clinical benefit. Clinical benefit is defined as: “The positive impact of a device on an individual’s health, expressed through meaningful, measurable, patient-relevant outcomes, including those related to diagnosis or public health” (MDR Article 2(53)).
Clinical benefits can be:
Benefits must align with regulatory standards like those from the FDA or EU MDR. Defining safety and performance parameters at the start of a literature review ensures direction, enabling a smoother compilation of the Clinical Evaluation Report and compliance with GSPRs.
Refers to a device’s ability to achieve its intended purpose and provide clinical benefits. For example, a spinal implant relieving pain and improving functionality demonstrates clinical performance.
Pertains to the device’s ability to function according to design specifications, such as dimensions, strength, or MRI safety.
Understanding this distinction is vital for structuring literature reviews and defining robust evaluation metrics.
Claims must balance optimism (marketing) and conservatism (regulatory/clinical) while being supported by preclinical or clinical data. For legacy devices developed before the MDR, literature reviews are invaluable for identifying suitable claims.
Examples of Strong Claims:
Weak Claims to Avoid:
Devices like surgical gloves may lack obvious performance criteria. Strategies include:
Safety Claim: “Fused handle to prevent breakage during procedures.”
Performance Claim: “Sterile under standard conditions.”
Focus on usability metrics and standard performance characteristics. Example: “Reduces blood clot formation by 15%.”
Require comprehensive data and risk-benefit analysis. Example: “Improves patient recovery rates by 25%.”
Emphasize accuracy and validation metrics. Example: “95% accuracy in lesion detection.”
Safety and performance criteria, along with clinical claims, are essential for medical device submissions. Defining strong, substantiated claims simplifies the submission process and ensures compliance. Practice identifying claims for various devices to hone this critical skill.
Pick a device and define claims based on research. Share your proposed claims and reasoning with peers or experts for feedback.