FDA and Optical Imaging Device/Combinations · Chief, General Surgery Devices Branch 1. Division of...

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FDA and Optical Imaging Device/CombinationsNeil R.P. Ogden, BMEChief, General Surgery Devices Branch 1Division of Surgical DevicesOffice of Device EvaluationFood and Drug Administration10903 New Hampshire Ave.WO 66, Room G414Silver Spring, MD 20993 301 796-6397Neil.ogden@fda.hhs.gov 301 847-8117 (fax)

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Brief personal history.

Notice of ConflictsNoneI currently work for FDA.

Disclaimer

This talk represents the professional opinions of the author and is not an official document, guidance, or policy of the US government, the Department of Health and Human Services or the Food and Drug Administration, nor should any official endorsement be inferred.

Presentation Overview What we have done What we want to do How we can do it Considerations

Who does What at FDA?

Center forFood Safety &Applied Nutrition

Center forDrug Evaluation &Research

Center forBiologics Evaluation &Research

Center forDevices &RadiologicalHealth

NationalCenter forToxicologicalResearch

Center forVeterinaryMedicine

Center forTobacco Products

Light based Imaging and Combination products

Presenter
Presentation Notes
http://micro-scopic.tumblr.com/post/31941583461/heart-cells-producing-smooth-muscle-fluorescence http://www.google.com/imgres?q=Fluorescence+in+tissues&safe=active&hl=en&biw=1680&bih=828&tbm=isch&tbnid=2itu9sM7nS3ryM:&imgrefurl=http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/techniques/fluorescence/gallery/rawmeat.html&docid=SJYFP5Ezr65yNM&imgurl=http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/techniques/fluorescence/gallery/images/rawmeatsmall.jpg&w=358&h=260&ei=bUU3UvqGN8es4APutoDgAQ&zoom=1&iact=rc&dur=125&page=2&tbnh=143&tbnw=207&start=38&ndsp=47&ved=1t:429,r:39,s:0,i:206&tx=88&ty=85 http://engineering.dartmouth.edu/magazine/surgical-probe-uses-fluorescence-to-guide-brain-tumor-removal/ http://www.google.com/imgres?q=ICG+Fluorescence+in+tissues&safe=active&hl=en&biw=1680&bih=828&tbm=isch&tbnid=6bXIsTH8HNkNIM:&imgrefurl=http://www.ptb.de/cms/en/fachabteilungen/abt8/fb-83/ag-831/rheuma.html%3Fprint%3D1&docid=eBCgvvAjJ9QOWM&itg=1&imgurl=http://www.ptb.de/cms/uploads/RTEmagicC_finger_04.jpg.jpg&w=600&h=324&ei=l0c3Uva0AZa84AOE9oD4Cg&zoom=1&iact=rc&dur=109&page=2&tbnh=135&tbnw=250&start=34&ndsp=50&ved=1t:429,r:78,s:0,i:321&tx=130&ty=85 http://www.google.com/imgres?q=sodium+fluorescein+in+tissues&start=94&safe=active&hl=en&biw=1680&bih=828&tbm=isch&tbnid=pqri3vFLCNC87M:&imgrefurl=http://rockland-inc.com/store/Antibodies-to-GFP-and-Antibodies-to-RFP-600-402-215-O4L_22209.aspx&docid=AVp4CkuPEUQimM&imgurl=http://rockland-inc.com/images/products/600-402-215-Anti-GFP-Antibody-3-IHC-4x3.jpg&w=466&h=479&ei=C0o3Uq6pFLih4AONzYHoCw&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=1009&vpy=274&dur=9219&hovh=228&hovw=221&tx=146&ty=136&page=3&tbnh=149&tbnw=144&ndsp=53&ved=1t:429,r:17,s:100,i:55

Cleared Device Indications with ICG

1. For use in intra-operative visual assessment of the coronary vasculature and bypass grafts during coronary artery bypass (CABG) surgery.

2. For visual assessment of blood flow and related tissue perfusion during cardiovascular surgical procedures.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Came through CDRH usually with CDER buy-in. We own these decisions.

Cleared Device Indications with ICG, continued3. For visual assessment of blood flow as an adjunctive method for the evaluation of tissue perfusion and related tissue-transfer circulation in tissue and free flaps used in plastic, micro- and reconstructive surgery.

4. For visual assessment of blood flow as an adjunctive method for the evaluation of flow in the native and anastomosed vessels, tissue perfusion and related tissue-transfer circulation in implanted and surrounding organs; to visualize blood flow indicative of perfusion of the donor implant prior to transplantation and to provide indication of organ function after transplantation

Cleared Device Indications with ICG, continued

5. For visual assessment of vessels, blood flow and related tissue perfusion with near infrared fluorescence imaging during minimally invasive surgery.

6. For visual assessment of vessels, blood flow, and related tissue perfusion with near infrared fluorescence imaging during minimally invasive robotic surgery.

7. For visual assessment of blood flow and related tissue perfusion during gastrointestinal surgery.

8. For use as an imaging tool in the evaluation of human tissue microstructure by providing two-dimensional, cross-sectional, real-time depth visualization

Cleared Device Indications, Cont’d9. For use in diagnostic and operative arthroscopic and endoscopic procedures to provide illumination and visualization of an interior cavity of the body through either a natural or surgical opening.

10. Intended to allow confocal laser imaging of the internal microstructure of tissues in the anatomical tract; enables surgeons to perform minimally invasive surgery using standard endoscopic visible light as well as visual assessment of vessels, blood flow and related tissue perfusion.

11. The da Vinci Fluorescence Imaging Vision System is intended to provide real‐time endoscopic visible and near‐infrared fluorescence imaging. The da Vinci® Fluorescence Imaging Vision System enables surgeons to perform minimally invasive surgery using standard endoscopic visible light as well as visual assessment of vessels, blood flow and related tissue perfusion, and at least one of the major extrahepatic bile ducts (cystic duct, common bile duct and common hepatic duct), using near infrared imaging.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
You see there are quite a variety of combination indications. These clearances do not alter the ICG labeling or approval. This combination pathway is for established agents. Co-packaging. #11 also for Stryker

Presentation Overview What we have done What we want to do How can we do it Considerations

Presenter
Presentation Notes
We want to help you get through the FDA process and to market. How do we go about that?

What Imaging Clinical Strategy?

Complex issues dependent on many variables:

• General visualization alone

• Specific disease detection

• Combination products

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Depends what you are trying to do.

Devices indicated for imaging specific diseases

Device Indication drives data needs.

Stand alone clinical data showing S&E will be needed.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Diagnostic indication(s) to differentiate between normal and not normal.

Devices indicated for margin detectionWhen and where is margin detection occurring?

Presenter
Presentation Notes
In situ prior to intervention, during surgery, ex vivo during surgery, post surgery after closure

Imaging Combination productsDevice plus drug or biologic will be reviewed together.

Combination products: ComplicatedLikely - stand alone clinical data showing Safety & Effectiveness.

If there’s a predicate – technical comparison.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
The safety and effectiveness of the device combined with the drug or biologic will be reviewed as used together from clinical/nonclinical studies.

Imaging Combination products, ContinuedRegulatory Pathway:• Established Drug, same dosing, admin.

Route - 510(k) or PMA. (ICG, Sodium Fluorescein)

• New Molecular Entity – New Drug Application (NDA)

• New drug indication - NDA or supplements

Combo Product - Which Center has lead - RFD?

Request For Designation (RFD) to our Office of Combination Products (OCP) will review Primary Mode of Action and how the combination achieves its Primary Intended Purpose(s) and what are the major FDA review challenges.

Presenter
Presentation Notes
2011 draft guidance - Classification of Products as Drugs and Devices and Additional Product Classification Issues

OCP GuidanceCopies are available from:

Office of Combination Products Food and Drug AdministrationWO32, Hub/Mail Room #5129 10903 New Hampshire Avenue

Silver Spring, MD 20993 (Tel) 301-796-8930 (Fax) 301-847-8619

http://www.fda.gov/CombinationProducts/default.htm.

Informational needs for FDA device review

Device Labeling Performance specifications Valid scientific evidence Tissue effects Mechanism-of-Action, like to have Clinical outcomes

VSE - 21 CFR 860.7 (2) Valid scientific evidence is evidence from well-controlled investigations, partially controlled studies, studies and objective trials without matched controls, well-documented case histories conducted by qualified experts, and reports of significant human experience with a marketed device, from which it can fairly and responsibly be concluded by qualified experts that there is reasonable assurance of the safety and effectiveness of a device under its conditions of use.

Presentation Overview

What we have done What we want to do How can we do it Considerations

Phantoms

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Phantoms are an important developing technology for calibration and standardization of imaging.

Standardization Efforts for Optical ImagingConsensus standards are corner stones for other imaging modalities, serving both the industry and the government agencies Increasing needs to standardize aspects of optical imaging - to facilitate product/clinical trial development

What to standardize? Optical Image calibration and

performance evaluation Optical Image quality, # pixels, color

rendering Optical Image size, resolution,

contrast, precision Optical Image capture, CCD, ICCD,

ultrasound, OCT, photoacoustic Optical Image creation

Optical imaging technology ---- non-ionizing, real-time microscopic observationAn emerging field in medical applications, particularly coupled with general surgery / minimally invasive surgery Based on technologies and indications, regulated as Class I, II, and III devicesSpecific disease detection, e.g., cancer, in screening and for intraoperative guidanceChallenges for combination products regulatory route with new drugs or approved drugs – across-Center efforts with CDER, CBER, and with Office of Combination Products

Summary Comments

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