GAFAMS, STARTUPS & INNOVATION IN HEALTHCARE by PHARMAGEEK
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Industrie #pharmaceutique et #blockchain : la #FDA lance son pilote #esante #hcsmeufr 

La Food and Drug Administration (FDA) doit trouver une solution pour tracer et vérifier les ordonnances de médicaments d’ici 2023. Plusieurs technologies sont mises à l’épreuve, dont la blockchain.
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Is Apple Wooing FDA in Preparation for Becoming a Regulated Mobile Health App Provider?

Is Apple Wooing FDA in Preparation for Becoming a Regulated Mobile Health App Provider? | GAFAMS, STARTUPS & INNOVATION IN HEALTHCARE by PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

Since its well-publicized meeting with the FDA in 2013, Apple has continued to meet with the agency regularly as well as to correspond by phone and email, according to emails obtained by MobiHealthNews via a Freedom of Information Act request to the FDA.

 

These emails show that Apple and the FDA have discussed the App Store review process, the 510(k) process, ResearchKit apps, diagnostic apps, working with the FDA in an “unregulated” way and more. The FDA even invited Apple to participate in regular briefings designed to help guide an international effort to harmonize medical software regulation. Though much of the sensitive information is redacted, the emails also point to three regulated medical devices that Apple is seriously pursuing: an app for diagnosing Parkinson’s disease and two separate but related cardiac devices.

 

Finally, the emails also suggest that, after Apple received a good deal of press for its 2013 FDA meeting, the agency worked with Apple to keep future meetings under the radar. The record shows meeting names and locations were changed, and great consideration was given to when to include top officials, like FDA Commissioner Dr. Robert Califf and Dr. Jeffrey Shuren, director for the agency’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, whose calendars are public and might have exposed the company to more media scrutiny.

 

“We’ve gotten into the health arena and we started looking at wellness, that took us to pulling a string to thinking about research, pulling that string a little further took us to some patient-care stuff, and that pulled a string that’s taking us into some other stuff," Apple CEO Tim Cook said. "When you look at most of the solutions, whether it’s devices, or things coming up out of Big Pharma, first and foremost, they are done to get the reimbursement [from an insurance provider]. Not thinking about what helps the patient. So if you don’t care about reimbursement, which we have the privilege of doing, that may even make the smartphone market look small.”

 

[These] incremental moves deeper into healthcare will soon take Apple over the FDA’s regulatory line. The emails tell us that Apple won’t be crossing that line unprepared — that in fact, the company has been steadily laying the groundwork for three years.


Via Pharma Guy
Pharma Guy's curator insight, November 29, 2016 7:19 AM

Related article: “Technology Companies Use CrowdSourced Big Data to Help Develop New Drugs”; http://sco.lt/6trsen

Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from Pharma Industry Regulation
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FDA Releases New “Leap-Frog” Guidance on 3D Printing of Medical Products, Including Innovative Drug Delivery Solutions  #hcsmeufr #esante cc @griottot #digitalhealth #3D4health

FDA Releases New “Leap-Frog” Guidance on 3D Printing of Medical Products, Including Innovative Drug Delivery Solutions  #hcsmeufr #esante cc @griottot #digitalhealth #3D4health | GAFAMS, STARTUPS & INNOVATION IN HEALTHCARE by PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

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[From The Readout by STAT] With 3-D printing, the drug industry is “going to be only bounded by imagination” in how to design pharmaceutical products, Dr. Janet Woodcock, director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said on December 5, 2017, at the FDA/CMS Summit in D.C.

 

“You can imagine printing a drug on a film and so then you can sort of cut pieces of film [to decide] how much dosing you want, or tear it off like candy that comes in little squares,” Woodcock said.

 

Woodcock also said that drugs could be printed on top of devices — perhaps an implantable device coated with a therapeutic film.

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Once considered a futuristic technology on the distant horizon, 3D printing of medical devices, medications and human tissue is quickly becoming a promising reality. Patients have already benefitted from 3D printed medical products through access to personalized devices and innovative drugs that have led to significant health improvements. But the FDA is now preparing for a significant wave of new technologies that are nearly certain to transform medical practice. We’re working to provide a more comprehensive regulatory pathway that keeps pace with those advances, and helps facilitate efficient access to safe and effective innovations that are based on these technologies.

 

The FDA has reviewed more than 100 devices currently on the market that were manufactured on 3D printers. These include patient-matched devices tailored to fit a patient’s anatomy. Examples include knee replacements and implants designed to fit like a missing puzzle piece into a patient’s skull for facial reconstruction. We also approved the first drug produced on a 3D printer (SPRITAM), which is used to treat seizures and has a more porous matrix than the drug manufactured in the traditional way, enabling the drug to dissolve more rapidly in the mouth to work faster. This is likely just the tip of the iceberg given the exponential growth of innovative research in this field. We envision that burn patients in the near future will be treated with their own new skin cells that are 3D printed directly onto their burn wounds. Further down the road, there is the potential for this same technology to eventually be used to develop replacement organs.

 

Today we are issuing new guidance to help advise device manufacturers on technical aspects of 3D printing, referred to as additive manufacturing, that clarifies what the FDA recommends manufacturers include on submissions for 3D-printed medical devices. It includes our thinking on various approaches to 3D printing, including device design, testing of products for function and durability, and quality system requirements. Overall, it will help manufacturers bring their innovations to market more efficiently by providing a transparent process for future submissions and making sure our regulatory approach is properly tailored to the unique opportunities and challenges posed by this promising new technology.

 

But this technical guidance -- categorized as a “leap-frog” guidance because it helps bridge where we are today with innovations of tomorrow -- is only intended to provide the FDA’s initial thoughts on an emerging technology with the understanding that our recommendations are likely to evolve as the technology develops in unexpected ways. We are already seeing the beginning of this evolution as hospitals and academic centers use their own 3D printers to create innovative dental implants, replacement knee joints, and experimental heart valves and bone implants for use in clinical studies. An increasing number of surgeons across the country have been saving infants born with a life-threatening breathing condition by creating patient-matched 3D-printed splints to install in their patients’ tiny airways, which expand and degrade as the babies grow.

 


Via Pharma Guy
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Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from Health, Digital Health, mHealth, Digital Pharma, hcsm latest trends and news (in English)
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Apple Inc. (AAPL), Samsung Group, Google Face FDA Scrutiny Over Health Technology Apps

Apple Inc. (AAPL), Samsung Group, Google Face FDA Scrutiny Over Health Technology Apps | GAFAMS, STARTUPS & INNOVATION IN HEALTHCARE by PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it
FDA has setup guidelines for tech companies that product healthcare software apps.

Via JP DOUMENG, Mariano Fernandez S., Celine Sportisse
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