Harvard Medical School, 175 Cambridge Street, Suite 200, Boston, MA 02114; Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Radiology, Boston, MA; Massachusetts General Hospital Institute for Technology Assessment, Boston, MA.
Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Acad Radiol. 2020 Jan;27(1):58-61. doi: 10.1016/j.acra.2019.09.017.
Recent years have seen digital technologies increasingly leveraged to multiply conventional imaging modalities' diagnostic power. Artificial intelligence (AI) is most prominent among these in the radiology space, touted as the "stethoscope of the 21st century" for its potential to revolutionize diagnostic precision, provider workflow, and healthcare expenditure. Partially owing to AI's unique characteristics, and partially due to its novelty, existing regulatory paradigms are not well suited to balancing patient safety with furthering the growth of this new sector. The current review examines the historic, current, and proposed regulatory treatment of AI-empowered medical devices by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). An innovative framework proposed by the FDA seeks to address these issues by looking to current good manufacturing practices (cGMP) and adopting a total product lifecycle (TPLC) approach. If brought into force, this may reduce the regulatory burden incumbent on developers, while holding them to rigorous quality standards, maximizing safety, and permitting the field to mature.
近年来,数字技术被越来越多地用于提高传统成像模式的诊断能力。在放射学领域,人工智能 (AI) 是最突出的技术之一,被誉为“ 21 世纪的听诊器”,因为它有可能彻底改变诊断精度、医疗服务提供者的工作流程和医疗支出。部分由于 AI 的独特特点,部分由于其新颖性,现有的监管模式并不适合在保障患者安全的同时促进这一新领域的发展。本文回顾了美国食品和药物管理局 (FDA) 对人工智能赋能的医疗器械的历史、当前和拟议的监管处理。FDA 提出的一个创新框架试图通过借鉴当前良好生产规范 (cGMP) 和采用全产品生命周期 (TPLC) 方法来解决这些问题。如果付诸实施,这可能会减轻开发者的监管负担,同时对他们严格执行质量标准,最大限度地保证安全性,并使该领域成熟。