Contrasting clinical evidence for market authorisation of cardio-vascular devices in Europe and the USA: A systematic analysis of 10 devices based on Austrian pre-reimbursement assessments

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Abstract

Background: European medical device regulation is under scrutiny and will be re-regulated with stricter rules concerning requirements for clinical evidence for high-risk medical devices. It is the aim of this study to analyse the differences between Europe and USA in dealing with risks and benefits of new cardio-vascular devices. Methods: Since no information is available on clinical data used by the Notified Body for CE-marking, data from Austrian pre-reimbursement assessments close to European market approval were used as proxy and compared with clinical data available at time of market approval by FDA in the USA. Results: 10 cardio-vascular interventions with 27 newly CE approved medical devices were analysed. The time lag between market authorisation in Europe and in the USA is 3 to 7 years. Only 7 CE-marked devices also hold a FDA market approval, 7 further devices are in FDA approved ongoing efficacy trials. For 4 of the CE-marked devices the FDA market application or the approval-trial was either suspended due to efficacy or safety concerns or the approval was denied. Evidence available at time of CE-marking are most often case-series or small feasibility RCTs, while large RCTs and only in rare cases prospective cohort studies are the basis of FDA approvals. Additionally, the FDA often requires post-approval studies for high-risk devices. Conclusions: Market authorisation based on mature clinical data deriving from larger RCTs and longer follow-ups do not only change the perspective on the risk-benefit ratio, but also secures real patient benefit and safety and assures payers of investing only in truly innovative devices.

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Wild, C., Erdös, J., & Zechmeister, I. (2014). Contrasting clinical evidence for market authorisation of cardio-vascular devices in Europe and the USA: A systematic analysis of 10 devices based on Austrian pre-reimbursement assessments. BMC Cardiovascular Disorders, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2261-14-154

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