Hwang Thomas J, Kesselheim Aaron S, Bourgeois Florence T
Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Program on Regulation, Therapeutics, and Law, Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts;
Program on Regulation, Therapeutics, and Law, Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts;
Pediatrics. 2014 May;133(5):e1197-202. doi: 10.1542/peds.2013-3348. Epub 2014 Apr 14.
Medical devices can be useful in a variety of diseases, but few devices have been specifically approved for use in children. The 2007 Pediatric Medical Device Safety and Improvement Act was passed to stimulate pediatric device development. The current state of trial evidence underpinning the approval of pediatric devices remains poorly described.
We identified all high-risk (ie, class III) devices approved through the premarket approval or humanitarian device exemption pathways for therapeutic use in children between 2008 and 2011. We collected key information on clinical trial design (randomization, blinding, controls, and types of end points) as well as age distribution of trial participants. We also identified US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-mandated postmarketing trials.
Twenty-two devices were approved for use in children via the premarket approval pathway and 3 via the humanitarian device exemption pathway. Twenty-two (88%) qualified as pediatric despite minimum approval ages of ≥18 years (the FDA Center for Devices and Radiologic Health considers patients 18-21 years old as pediatric). Most devices were approved on the basis of nonrandomized (59%), open-label (68%) studies with surrogate effectiveness end points (86%). Overall, 21 (84%) devices were not studied in any patients <18 years of age. Postmarketing studies were mandated by the FDA for 19 (76%) devices, although only 3 (18%) required enrollment of pediatric patients.
Most high-risk pediatric devices are approved on the basis of trials in patients ≥18 years old, with few pediatric patients exposed to the devices before market availability. Few postmarketing studies require additional study in pediatric patients.
医疗设备在多种疾病中都可能有用,但很少有设备专门获批用于儿童。2007年通过了《儿科医疗设备安全与改进法案》以刺激儿科设备的研发。然而,支撑儿科设备获批的试验证据的现状仍鲜有描述。
我们确定了2008年至2011年间通过上市前批准或人道主义设备豁免途径获批用于儿童治疗的所有高风险(即III类)设备。我们收集了关于临床试验设计(随机分组、设盲、对照和终点类型)以及试验参与者年龄分布的关键信息。我们还确定了美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)要求的上市后试验。
22种设备通过上市前批准途径获批用于儿童,3种通过人道主义设备豁免途径获批。尽管最低批准年龄≥18岁(FDA设备与放射健康中心将18 - 21岁的患者视为儿科患者),但仍有22种(88%)被认定为儿科设备。大多数设备是基于非随机(59%)、开放标签(68%)的研究以及替代有效性终点(86%)获批的。总体而言,21种(84%)设备未在任何18岁以下患者中进行研究。FDA要求对19种(76%)设备进行上市后研究,尽管只有3种(18%)需要纳入儿科患者。
大多数高风险儿科设备是基于对≥18岁患者的试验获批的,在上市前很少有儿科患者接触到这些设备。很少有上市后研究要求对儿科患者进行额外研究。