Data
Innovations Receives FDA Clearance for Its Instrument Manager
Software
Dark
Daily was recently forwarded a press release entitled Data
Innovations Receives FDA Clearance for Instrument Manager.
Our first response was to wonder why Data
Innovations decided to pursue FDA clearance for Instrument
Manager.
After
all, in general, laboratory middleware does not require FDA clearance.
Furthermore, many laboratory middleware and laboratory information
systems (LIS) companies have criticized the FDA whenever, over
the past decade, that the federal agency suggested that FDA clearance
of laboratory middleware and laboratory information systems should
be required. The FDA reasons that regulation is necessary because
those products, in effect, practice medicine by providing guidance
to pathologists and physicians, which affects patient care.
Dark Daily asked Gregory Vail, CEO of Data Innovations, why the
company decided to make the move to get FDA clearance. Vail gave
us several reasons:
- FDA
clearance is required for software used in blood banking and
the company’s partners and customers increasingly want
to use Instrument Manager in that environment.
-
Obtaining FDA clearance of the company’s software is a
demonstration of Data Innovations’ commitment to the quality
process. This extends beyond the development of the software,
and includes the procedures and systems that must be put in
place throughout the company, such as a CAPA (Corrective and
Preventive Action) system.
-
FDA clearance is of great benefit to the company’s FDA-regulated
partners (like in vitro diagnostics manufacturers). It means
that, not only is the software FDA-cleared, but also that Data
Innovations is FDA inspection-ready.
-
FDA clearance raises the bar for middleware products and helps
the company claim a leadership role in that market.
Our
follow-up question to Vail was whether he felt that FDA clearance
should be required for laboratory middleware and laboratory information
systems in general. “My opinion is that the sophisticated
ways in which labs now use middleware and LIS functionality are
likely to encourage more regulation,” he responded. “For
example, the increased amount of automated functions, such as auto
verification, being performed by the software, illustrate how both
[laboratory middleware and laboratory information systems] impact
patient safety every bit as much as an FDA-regulated laboratory
instrument that is used to initially produce a result.”
Pathologists and laboratory administrators should take note of Vail’s
observation. He offers a good reason why the FDA would be motivated
to bring middleware and laboratory information systems under some
form of review and clearance for use in the clinical marketplace.
The integration of laboratory informatics is likely to further reinforce
this position at the FDA. For example, one reason Vail’s company
pursued clearance for its Instrument Manager product is because
some laboratory customers wanted to use it in their blood banks.
Further, the FDA’s active interest in regulating In Vitro
Diagnostic Multivariate Index Assays (IVDMIAs), which incorporate
sophisticated software algorithms to generate a test result, may
further encourage the agency to require review and clearance for
middleware and LIS products.
Related Articles:
Here's a listing of Pathology
Informatics Standards and Web Resources that includes regulations
governing laboratory software, prepared by the Association for Pathology
Informatics
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