The AI Touch: Artificial Intelligence Could Boost Quality Systems, Cut FDA Inspections – But Is Industry Ready?

As the medical device industry begins to push the boundaries of artificial intelligence – exploring ways to use advanced AI systems to review, sort and process big data to find quality systems or product problems that would simply take too long for human eyes to see – FDA is also looking at ways to use AI for its own advantage. "AI will reduce investigational time and increase FDA's speed in taking action on a problematic firm," one agency official says. Meanwhile, a new Artificial Intelligence Initiative has been launched by Xavier University to better determine how AI can be used in the quality and regulatory space. Also: J&J subsidiary Janssen explains how it uses AI for quality and regulatory applications, and an expert from Shire tells how top management can be convinced that using artificial intelligence can save their firms money.

AI hand reaches

Pioneering device-makers that use advanced artificial intelligence systems to analyze their vast streams of data to pinpoint predictive outcomes for quality systems and marketed products could one day see fewer US FDA facility inspections, an agency official says.

Art Czabaniuk, program division director/district director for the Division of Pharmaceutical Quality Operations III within FDA's Office of Regulatory Affairs, foresees "great benefit from AI in the regulatory environment" –...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Medtech Insight for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from AI

TRiCares Tricuspid Valve Replacement System Reduces Regurgitation In First-In-Human Study

 

TRiCares presented data from the first-in-human study for its tricuspid valve replacement system – Topaz – at EuroPCR 2025 on 22 May.

Mirvie Launches Predictive Blood Test For Preeclampsia

 
• By 

Mirvie launched Encompass, a blood test to help identify women over age 35 who are at moderate risk for preeclampsia, and will conduct additional studies to support reimbursements from payers.

Digital Health And AI Tools Advance Cardiac Event Prediction, SCAI 2025 Data Show

 
• By 

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest remains one of the most challenging and resource-intensive emergencies in cardiovascular care. At SCAI 2025, clinicians presented a novel algorithm that improved triage decisions and reduced unnecessary interventions.

SpotitEarly Raised $20.3M In New Funding To Bring AI- And Dog-Sniffing-Powered Early Cancer Detection Test To US

 
• By 

Israeli-based SpotitEarly hopes to bring an early cancer-detection test, which uses dogs’ noses to detect compounds in exhaled breath and AI analysis, to US homes in 2026.

More from Digital Technologies

Thousands Of Cardiac Digital Twins Reveal Novel Connections With Mental Health

 

King’s College London, Imperial College London and The Alan Turing Institute constructed cardiac digital twins at scale, creating over 3,400, in a new study using UK Biobank data published in Nature Cardiovascular Research on 16 May.

Synchron And Apple Team Up To Use ‘Mind-Thought Connection’ To Control iPhones, iPads

 
• By 

Apple and Synchron are teaming up to develop technologies that will one day allow people who can’t use their hands or voice to control iPhones, iPads and other Apple devices by using only their thoughts.

Ketryx Wants Its Validated AI Agents To Accelerate Compliance Workflows

 
• By 

While the initial focus is medical devices and life sciences, Ketryx sees future opportunities in other high-regulation sectors including automotive, aerospace and defense, pharma manufacturing and nuclear systems.