U.S.
picks companies to help make rules for advanced personal
health monitors
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[September 27, 2017] By
Stephen Nellis
(Reuters) - Digital devices designed to
monitor the wearer's health in much greater detail than current models
will need regulatory approval, and Apple Inc, Fitbit Inc and seven other
companies will take part in a program to speed the approval process, the
U.S. health regulator said on Tuesday.
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The firms will take part in a program that could make it faster for
digital health devices to come to market by requiring less
information to be sent to regulators ahead of time, the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration said.
Current devices, like the Apple Watch or Fitbit Blaze, measure
things like motion and heart rate. But to take further measurements
like blood oxygen or glucose, future devices might full under
regulatory review. That review can take months or years, which is
far slower than the pace of software updates from most technology
firms.
Because of the potential for lengthy reviews, consumer technology
companies have been reluctant to wade directly into territory
regulated by the FDA. Apple, for example, has tended to partner with
existing health researchers and companies DexCom Inc, a conventional
medical device firm, for uses of their products that involve
regulatory oversight.
But under President Donald Trump, the FDA has been moving to relax
some of its requirements. The FDA in July created a pilot program
that would pre-certify certain companies so that they have to submit
less information before marketing a product.
The initial participants in the pilot program also included Samsung
Electronics Co Ltd, Alphabet Inc's Verily biotech unit, Johnson &
Johnson and Swiss biotech firm Roche AG, among others.
The FDA said in a statement it was also considering whether
companies in the pilot program "may not have to submit a product for
premarket review in some cases."
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"Our method for regulating digital health products must recognize
the unique and iterative characteristics of these products," FDA
Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said in the statement.
One major difference in the pilot program from existing regulations
is that it will evaluate companies based on how well their
software-design systems work, rather than looking at each product
and its accompanying software individually.
"We are hopeful this will allow us to accelerate FDA regulated
features and software development, bringing new capabilities that
could positively impact health outcomes to market more quickly,"
Fitbit CEO James Park said in a statement.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis; Editing by David Gregorio)
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