An FDA investigator observed two different products with the same lot number at a manufacturer of cannulas and trocars; employees at Lusys Labs – a maker of in vitro diagnostic kits – handled and packaged coated membranes with bare hands; procedures at software-maker Merge Healthcare allowed for devices that hadn't fully completed design validation to be shipped to end users for clinical use on patients; and more. Six device warning letters were listed by FDA this week.
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Now that the US FDA has chosen not to appeal a March ruling effectively killing the agency’s efforts to regulate lab-developed tests as medical devices, will the agency adopt a different strategy to flex its regulatory muscle?
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Now that the US FDA has chosen not to appeal a March ruling effectively killing the agency’s efforts to regulate lab-developed tests as medical devices, will the agency adopt a different strategy to flex its regulatory muscle?
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