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ATTORNEY-CLIENT CONFIDENTIAL
CDRH, Congress and the 510(k) Process
MassMEDIC | The 510(k) Process Best Practices in Changing Times
Paul Kim, Foley Hoag LLPApril 1 2010
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Health Reform Toplines Strategic Priorities Congressional Outlook Closing Discussion
Health Reform Toplines Strategic PrioritiesStrategic Priorities Congressional OutlookCongressional Outlook Closing DiscussionClosing Discussion
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Health Care ReformPatient Protection & Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148)
– The Senate passed on December 24, 2009– The House passed same bill on March 21– President signed into law on March 23
Health Care and Education Affordability Reconciliation Act (Pub. L. 111-152)– The House passed the reconciliation bill, meant to change
provisions in PPACA, on March 21– The Senate passed and House agreed to on March 25 – President signed into law on March 30
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Core ConsequencesCOVERAGE Insures 32 million uninsured Extends health insurance from 83 percent to 94
percent of Americans by 2019 COST $938 billion, 2010-2019 Second decade costs grow dramatically Deficit reduction of $124 billion
FINANCING Reimbursement reductions for Medicare providers Excise taxes on high-value health plans Expansion of Medicare HI tax to non-payroll
incomedusty fees
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Timeline
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2016 2018 2020
• Part D manufacturer discount, July• Part D model agreement, May• 340B regulations, September• Increased Medicaid rebate, January• Funding for CER begins• Select insurance reforms: lifetime caps, pre-existing conditions, rescissions, preventive services
• Reduced beneficiary obligations in coverage gap begins• Hospital-acquired conditions regulations• Pharmaceutical industry excise tax• Prescription drug labeling report by Secretary• Medical homes
• Part D medication therapy management programs• CMS Medicare & Medicaid Innovation Center annual reports begin• Rewards for ACOs
• Physician payment annual reporting begins• Medical device tax• Individual mandate
• State exchanges begin• Prescription drug labeling regulations• First IPAB report to President & Congress• Wellness demonstration projects• Insurance industry fee• Employer mandate• Remaining insurance reforms: annual caps, pre-existing condition, discrimination, premium ratings
• Payment bundling pilot program, per Secretary’s discretion
• “Cadillac” tax
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Payment Reforms Comparative Effectiveness Institute
–$600M annual research budget to compare the clinical effectiveness, risk and benefits of two or more medical treatments, services or items
Medicare and Medicaid Innovation Center–Test innovative payment and service delivery models to
reduce expenditures while enhancing quality of care
IPAB– Recommend ways to achieve “savings target”- lesser of
1.5% of Medicare spending or excess identified by CMS Actuary; physicians, hospitals shielded until 2019
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Medical Device Excise Tax Broad But Deferred Tax
–Excise tax on devices equal to 2.3% of price from 2013; tax deductible lessens impact; generate $20 billion over 10 years
–All devices except eyeglasses, contact lenses, hearing aids, and other devices that are sold to the general public at retail establishments (Class I OTC)
Key Issues– Exemption but “generally purchased by general public”; “at retail”; and
“for individual use” as determined by Treasury–Effect of reconciliation: dropped from 2.9%, ratio of total gross sales,
pushed back from 2011, dropped broad Class I exemption– Gone but not forgotten: House (Administration) national device registry
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“Sunshine” Reporting First Reports Due March 2013, Data Collection in 2012
–Device, drug manufacturers must disclose almost all payments and “transfers of value” made to physicians or teaching hospitals
–Disclosures publicly available via a searchable online database–Specific payments made to individual physicians and teaching
hospitals, rather than aggregate payments– Limited “floor” preemption overrides some state laws
Primes Heightened Scrutiny, Enforcement Initiatives–Significant financial penalties for noncompliance: unknowing
failures, $1-10,000 capped at $150,000 and knowing failures, $10-100,000 capped at $1 million
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New LeadershipNew Leadership Strategic Priorities Congressional OutlookCongressional Outlook Closing Discussion Closing Discussion
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Leadership | Old is the New New
– Dr. Margaret ‘Peggy’ Hamburg– Dr. Josh Sharfstein, Principal DC– John Taylor III, Counselor– David Dorsey, DC Policy Planning Budget– Mike Taylor, DC Food– Dr. Jesse Goodman, Chief Scientist and DC– Dr. Mac Lumpkin, DC International– Dr. Janet Woodcock, CDER– Dr. Jeff Shuren, CDRH
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FDA Priorities
– Funding (FY2011 +23%, +6% in approps)– Scientific Staffing– Imports, Food Safety, H1N1, Tobacco– Transparency, Consistency, Predictability– Congressional Oversight Unabated but
Administration Freedom to Operate– Reviews and Credibility – REMS, 510(k)s
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CDRH FY 2010 Strategic Priorities
– Fully Implement a Total Product Life Cycle Approach
– Enhance Communication and Transparency
– Strengthen Our Workforce and Workplace– Proactively Facilitate Innovation and
Address Unmet Public Health Needs
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CDRH Pre-Market Reforms
– Begin implementing cross-center compliance strategy (May)
– Implemented 510(k) Working Group (Sept)– Adopted 510(k) iReviews (Sept)– “Take steps” on class III 510(k)s (end 2010)– Improve quality of PMA clinical data (end 2010)– Assessed IOM recommendations (June 2011)
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CDRH Post-Market Reforms
Increase real time AERs and establish MedSun ‐interoperability, increase registry partnerships (Jan 2011)
Better capture, analyze, share high quality AER ‐information (Jan 2012)
Implement a Unique Device Identification (UDI) system (Jan 2013)
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The best laid schemes o' mice an' men Gang aft agley
“Let’s look under the hood and see if there are any problems”
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New LeadershipNew Leadership Strategic PrioritiesStrategic Priorities Congressional Outlook Closing Discussion Closing Discussion
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Menaflex
“External considerations affected the decision-making process and possibly the review decisions of the ODE Director”[This] “constitutes a clear deviation from the principles of integrity used in this review and undermines the ability of the agency to counter the suggestion that lobbying on behalf of ReGen affected the decision”“The predicate [510(k) review] system, as implemented, appears to perpetuate questionable review decisions”Hamburg: Schultz’s departure “would be in the best interest of the center and the agency”
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Decisions about Class III Devices
Fiscal Years 2003–2007
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MDUFMA Performance Goals– +242 FTEs in FY 2007 vs 2002– Medical Device User Fee Amendments of
2007 – MDUFMA fees “significantly reduced”– 510(k) fee fell 18%, PMA fee by 34% – Small business fees feel 49% and 57%– Will short-term benefits be offset in
reauthorization? Post-market safety ‘mission creep’?
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Heightened Advocacy
“Clearly, the focus of the 510(k) process has been on letting companies change devices in the name of innovation, not based on public health standards or problems. As a result, devices are being sold that are so different from previous “substantially equivalent” devices that the FDA has no idea whether the product is safe or effective, and in many cases these innovative devices are either not as safe as other products on the market, or not as effective.”
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Select Issues– Reforming 510(k) Clearance Authority–510(k) Rescission Authority– 510(k) Postmarket, ‘Condition of Clearance’
Studies – Preclearance Inspections Linkage– MDUFMA Fee Linakge– Riegel, Wyeth Preemption– Device DTC Restrictions, Disclaimers
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Potential Vehicles– Post health reform fatigue, short election year –
yet food safety (S.510) may move– FDAGA as vehicle– 2011 MDUFMA and ‘UFA reauthorizations– Note progression of ‘counter cyclical’ legislation:
Sunshine (Kohl-Grassley), reverse payments–Sustained Oversight (Myxo mitral-valve ring,
orthotics, etc)
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New LeadershipNew Leadership Strategic PrioritiesStrategic Priorities Notable Product ReviewsNotable Product Reviews Closing Discussion