Fraser Alan G, Nelissen Rob G H H, Kjærsgaard-Andersen Per, Szymański Piotr, Melvin Tom, Piscoi Paul
Department of Cardiology, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK.
Department of Orthopaedics, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands.
EFORT Open Rev. 2021 Oct 19;6(10):839-849. doi: 10.1302/2058-5241.6.210081. eCollection 2021 Oct.
In the European Union (EU), the delivery of health services is a national responsibility but there are concerted actions between member states to protect public health. Approval of pharmaceutical products is the responsibility of the European Medicines Agency, while authorising the placing on the market of medical devices is decentralised to independent 'conformity assessment' organisations called notified bodies. The first legal basis for an EU system of evaluating medical devices and approving their market access was the Medical Device Directive, from the 1990s. Uncertainties about clinical evidence requirements, among other reasons, led to the EU Medical Device Regulation (2017/745) that has applied since May 2021. It provides general principles for clinical investigations but few methodological details - which challenges responsible authorities to set appropriate balances between regulation and innovation, pre- and post-market studies, and clinical trials and real-world evidence. Scientific experts should advise on methods and standards for assessing and approving new high-risk devices, and safety, efficacy, and transparency of evidence should be paramount. The European Commission recently awarded a Horizon 2020 grant to a consortium led by the European Society of Cardiology and the European Federation of National Associations of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, that will review methodologies of clinical investigations, advise on study designs, and develop recommendations for aggregating clinical data from registries and other real-world sources. The CORE-MD project (Coordinating Research and Evidence for Medical Devices) will run until March 2024. Here, we describe how it may contribute to the development of regulatory science in Europe. Cite this article: 2021;6:839-849. DOI: 10.1302/2058-5241.6.210081.
在欧盟(EU),卫生服务的提供是各国的责任,但成员国之间会采取协同行动来保护公众健康。药品的审批由欧洲药品管理局负责,而医疗器械投放市场的授权则下放给名为“公告机构”的独立“合格评定”组织。欧盟医疗器械评估体系及批准其进入市场的首个法律依据是20世纪90年代的《医疗器械指令》。由于临床证据要求等方面的不确定性,催生了自2021年5月起实施的欧盟《医疗器械法规》(2017/745)。该法规提供了临床研究的一般原则,但方法学细节较少,这就要求监管机构在监管与创新、上市前和上市后研究、临床试验与真实世界证据之间找到恰当平衡。科学专家应就评估和批准新型高风险器械的方法和标准提供建议,证据的安全性、有效性和透明度应是首要考量。欧盟委员会最近向一个由欧洲心脏病学会以及欧洲国家骨科与创伤学协会联合会牵头的联盟授予了一笔“地平线2020”基金,该联盟将审查临床研究方法,为研究设计提供建议,并就汇总来自注册登记及其他真实世界来源的临床数据制定建议。CORE-MD项目(医疗器械协调研究与证据)将持续至2024年3月。在此,我们描述该项目如何可能有助于欧洲监管科学的发展。引用本文:2021;6:839 - 849。DOI:10.1302/2058 - 5241.6.210081。