Regenerative Medicine Therapies: Manufacturing Changes May Not Impact RMAT Designation

Final guidance notes that preliminary clinical evidence may come from studies conducted outside the US, says historical controls may be considered in clinical trial designs.

3D Human or animal Cell

US FDA made minor tweaks to its draft guidance for development of regenerative medicine therapies, clarifying that historical controls may be considered in clinical trials, that sponsors may receive more than one regenerative medicine advanced therapy (RMAT) designation for a product, and that manufacturing changes to products would not necessarily preclude an initial RMAT designation or cause it to be rescinded.

The agency's final guidance, Expedited Programs for Regenerative Medicine Therapies for Serious Conditions, includes few changes to the draft...

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 Clinical Trials

Digital Health Roundup: Synchron Syncs With Apple, Ketryx’s AI Agents, AdvaMed’s AI RoadMap

In this week's Digital Health Roundup, MedTech Insight's Shubham Singh explores how Ketryx's launch of validated AI agents could reshape compliance automation in medtech. Marion Webb highlights news from BCI makers Synchron, Axoft and Subsense. Elizabeth Orr discusses AI advances at the FDA.

Guardant’s Multi-Cancer Detection Test Granted FDA Breakthrough Device Designation

 

Guardant Health’s methylation-based blood test – Shield MCD – showed a specificity of 98.6% and sensitivity of 75% across eight cancer types in its clinical validation data presented at ASCO.

Abbott Announces FDA Approval Of Tendyne Transcatheter Mitral Valve Replacement System

 
• By 

Abbott received the US FDA nod for its Tendyne system, offering a minimally invasive alternative to replace the valves of patients with severe mitral valve disease who are at risk for open-heart surgery.

Cardiosense Advances Noninvasive Heart Monitoring With Final Validation Study

 
• By 

Cardiosense has launched a nationwide clinical study, SEISMIC-HF II, to validate its non-invasive, AI-powered technology for monitoring heart failure. The data will be used to file for US regulatory clearance of the Cardiosense heart failure monitoring platform.

More from R&D

Johnson & Johnson MedTech: How To Scale Digital Solutions

 

J&J's EMEA head of digital solutions, Julia Fishman, talks about the major hurdles in scaling digital innovation, tips for clinical adoption and what’s up next on J&J’s innovation road map. Robot-assisted surgery pioneer Ivo Broeders gives his perspective on the difficulties in clinical adoption.

Abbott Launches Next-Gen Delivery System For Proclaim DRG Neurostim

 
• By 

Allen Burton, Abbott’s medical director of neuromodulation told Medtech Insight that the delivery system was developed to make the procedure easier for physicians, especially those who perform the implantations infrequently.

Digital Health Roundup: Synchron Syncs With Apple, Ketryx’s AI Agents, AdvaMed’s AI RoadMap

In this week's Digital Health Roundup, MedTech Insight's Shubham Singh explores how Ketryx's launch of validated AI agents could reshape compliance automation in medtech. Marion Webb highlights news from BCI makers Synchron, Axoft and Subsense. Elizabeth Orr discusses AI advances at the FDA.