Bottini Massimo, Ryu Seung-Jun, Terander Adrian Elmi, Voglis Stefanos, Maldaner Nicolai, Bellut David, Regli Luca, Serra Carlo, Staartjes Victor E
Machine Intelligence in Clinical Neuroscience & Microsurgical Neuroanatomy (MICN) Laboratory, Department of Neurosurgery, Clinical Neuroscience Center, University Hospital Zürich, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.
Department of Neurosurgery, Daejeon Eulji University Hospital, Eulji University Medical School, Daejeon, Korea.
Neurospine. 2025 Mar;22(1):134-143. doi: 10.14245/ns.2449186.593. Epub 2025 Mar 31.
This paper analyzes the regulatory frameworks for artificial intelligence/machine learning AI/ML-enabled medical devices in the European Union (EU), the United States (US), and the Republic of Korea, with a focus on applications in spine surgery. The aim is to provide guidance for developers and researchers navigating regulatory pathways. A review of current literature, regulatory documents, and legislative frameworks was conducted. Key differences in regulatory bodies, risk classification, submission requirements, and approval pathways for AI/ML medical devices were examined in the EU, US, and Republic of Korea. The EU AI Act (2024) establishes a risk-based framework, requiring regulatory review based on device risk, with high-risk devices subject to stricter oversight. The US applies a more flexible approach, allowing multiple submission pathways and incorporating a focus on continuous learning. The Republic of Korea emphasizes possibilities of streamlined approval and with growing use of real-world data to support validation. Developers must ensure regulatory alignment early in the development process, focusing on key aspects like dataset quality, transparency, and continuous monitoring. Across all regions, the need for technical documentation, quality management systems, and bias mitigation are essential for approval. Developers are encouraged to adopt adaptable strategies to comply with evolving regulatory standards, ensuring models remain transparent, fair, and reliable. The EU's comprehensive AI Act enforces stricter oversight, while the US and Korea offer more flexible pathways. Developers of spine surgery AI/ML devices must tailor development strategies to align with regional regulations, emphasizing transparent development, quality assurance, and postmarket monitoring to ensure approval success.
本文分析了欧盟(EU)、美国(US)和韩国针对人工智能/机器学习(AI/ML)赋能的医疗设备的监管框架,重点关注脊柱手术中的应用。目的是为开发者和研究人员在监管路径方面提供指导。对当前文献、监管文件和立法框架进行了综述。研究了欧盟、美国和韩国在AI/ML医疗设备的监管机构、风险分类、提交要求和批准途径方面的关键差异。欧盟《人工智能法案》(2024年)建立了一个基于风险的框架,要求根据设备风险进行监管审查,高风险设备受到更严格的监督。美国采用了更灵活的方法,允许多种提交途径,并注重持续学习。韩国强调简化批准的可能性,并越来越多地利用真实世界数据来支持验证。开发者必须在开发过程的早期确保符合监管要求,重点关注数据集质量、透明度和持续监测等关键方面。在所有地区,技术文档、质量管理体系和偏差缓解对于批准都是必不可少的。鼓励开发者采用适应性策略以符合不断演变的监管标准,确保模型保持透明、公平和可靠。欧盟全面的《人工智能法案》实施更严格的监督,而美国和韩国提供了更灵活的途径。脊柱手术AI/ML设备的开发者必须调整开发策略以符合地区法规,强调透明开发、质量保证和上市后监测,以确保批准成功。