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There are two major quality system documents governing  medical device development and commercialization. US devices must be  compliant with 21 CFR 820. International devices must be compliant with  ISO 13485, which is based on ISO 9001. These documents are similar but  have distinct differences. Differences between requirements such as with design control are described. Assumptions for US FDA 510(k) submissions are discussed. Medical devices not meeting US FDA CFR 820 GMP  requirements are termed “adulterated.” Part of the 510(k) submission is a  “Truthful and Accuracy” statement in which a senior manager certifies  the submission is truthful, accurate, and no substantial material has  been purposefully omitted. FDA policy requires initial review within 15  days so that submissions should be complete at the time of submission.  If incomplete, the FDA may refuse to accept a submission. Knowing which  QMS is operable, under what circumstances, and in which markets, is  critical to compliance and to the accuracy of subsequent documentation  in meeting regulatory requirements. Understanding that though ISO 13485  and 21 CFR 820 QMS requirements have many similarities, they are  different documents with different requirements and different regulatory oversight.
INTRODUCTION
In reviewing the many forums on medical devices, it  becomes evident that there is still much confusion over which Quality  Management Systems (QMS) are operable for medical devices. There are two major quality system documents governing medical device development and commercialization. Product sold in the U.S must be compliant with 21  CFR 820, the QMS Regulation/cGMP for medical devices. The international  QMS, ISO 13485, which is based on ISO 9001, is the EU version of a QMS  for medical devices. Product sold in the EU and desiring the CE mark  must comply with the international QMS. Product sold in the U.S does not need to comply with ISO 13485 and vice versa for product sold in the  EU.
Both 21 CFR 820 and ISO 13485 are very similar in their  basic systems and documentation, and many companies develop a QMS that  includes both. There are, however, differences between the two  documents. With CFR 820, a company develops product under a defined  design control system with prescribed documentation. Similar  requirements exist in ISO 13485 under “Product Realization,” but they  are somewhat more generalized as to how the requirements are documented  as having been met. CFR 820 requires a Design History File (DHF) showing development over time. ISO 13485 requires that each requirement be  documented, but there is no DHF requirement per se. The EU Medical  Device Directives (EU MDD) requires a Technical file/Design dossier to  show that the Essential Requirements of the MDD have been met. This  requirement is a snapshot of the device at a point in time, not a  compilation of the development history of the device under change  control.
DESIGN CONTROL UNDER 21 CFR 820.30
Design control documentation under 820.30 addresses nine areas, all of which must be documented to prove compliance:
- Design and Development Planning (the author recommends Gantt Chart to address this requirement)
- Design Input
- Design Output
- Design Reviews
- Design Verification
- Design Validation
- Design Transfer
- Design Changes—all compiled into the
- Design History File (DHF).
The goal of these requirements, implemented in 1996–1997,  is to ensure that device R&D, from a reasonable company-defined  start date, is performed using change control. The FDA correctly  reasoned that many device problems are design problems and that  uncontrolled changes during R&D in the past were the cause of many  of the device non-conformances. These changes in turn lead to field  problems once the device entered the marketplace.  
510(k) ASSUMPTIONS
When the device has been developed, if US 21 CFR  8XX-defined as Class II, a 510(k) must be submitted to the US FDA for  review and marketing clearance. In the 510(k), the submitter certifies  that they have complied with the CGMPs as defined by CFR 820, including  820.30 Design Controls in the design/development of the product. Such  certification strongly implies that the applicable elements of CFR  820.30 have been completed/documented prior to design transfer and  manufacture. The submitting company is not audited against them,  however, at the time of submission. The US FDA may not perform  compliance audits such as these until some later date (a year or  longer); however, the FDA requires compliance from the start of serious  development (CFR 820.30) and from design transfer/manufacture for lots  destined for sale in the US. 
Thus, devices must comply with 21 CFR 820 (not ISO 13485)  as far as sale in the US is concerned. The FDA 510(k) is an FDA review  process for mainly Class II medical devices, as defined by the US CFR,  not the EU Medical Device Directive—Council Directive 93/42/EEC, for  marketing clearance in the US. The device must be manufactured under the US CGMP as spelled out in CFR 820, whether by a US company or offshore  company for products for sale in the US. One of the 21 required sections of the “traditional” 510(k) submission, among other things, must  indicate such. Some of the CFR 820 requirements are the Design History  File (DHF); Device Master Record (DMR); Device History (batch record)  (DHR); Production and Process Control (P&PC); Corrective and  Preventive Action (CAPA), including complaints and Non-Conforming  Material Report (NCMR); verification and validation (V&V), and so  on. Much of the aforementioned is also addressed in ISO 13485 but often  using different terminology. While CFR 820.30 requires a DHF  (documenting product development and change control over time, meeting  requirements of 820.30; classified under 21 CFR 8XX-series), the EU MDD  requires proof of compliance in the form of a Design Dossier or  Technical File showing device status as currently marketed and  classified under the Annex IX Rules of the MDD.
While there are many similarities between these two major  QMS, there are important differences in each QMS and related device  requirements and classification. The US FDA does not currently accept  ISO 13485 audits as indicating compliance to 21 CFR 820 and vice versa.  Notified-Bodies, hired or contracted by the device manufacturer, audit  for ISO 13485 compliance, while US FDA personnel, supported by the US  taxpayer and device manufacturers in the form of fees, audit for 21 CFR  820 compliance, and so on.  
TRADITIONAL 510(k)
The traditional 510(k) must address 21 elements (see  FDA.gov) with data submitted or summarized (or N/A) under each of the 21 elements. Some of the FDA forms required in the 510(k) submission help  the submitter through specific documentation requirements by means of  checklists or data completion forms. US FDA Guidance documents exist for many devices and their requirements including specific software /  firmware documentation requirements. These provide helpful information  when involving similar products. The FDA 510(k) database on fda.gov can  provide information on the predicate devices. Both the EU and US require hazard analysis with both using ISO 14971 as the de facto standard. Both require biocompatibility studies per ISO 10993 if  applicable. The same applies to device sterilization if applicable.  Other ISO standards are also accepted/required as applicable by both.  When using an outside consultant to generate or review 510(k)  documentation or CGMP QMS system, it must be done in accordance with 21  CFR 820 (not ISO 13485) for medical devices for sale in the US.
While some contend that CFR 820 is not relevant to the  510(k) process, the author strongly disagrees. All product for sale in  the US must be manufactured under the FDA CGMPs, which is 21 CFR 820 and not ISO 13485. The device must be developed under CFR 820.30, and  documented under the documentation/records requirements of CFR 820,  which defines the company QMS for US marketed product. The test samples  used for the testing required under the 510(k)—functional, predicate  comparisons, biocompatibility, shelf life, sterility, and similar—must  be so manufactured and documented. All of this is understood by the FDA  and should also be understood by the submitter. Those documents must  then be retained for the life of the product and at least two years  beyond the last date of shipment. The documents are subject to future  FDA auditing after that device is marketed in the US since it has been  cleared in the 510(k) review process.
ADULTERATED MEDICAL DEVICES
Anything less than meeting the above documentation  requirements leads the FDA to term the resultant device "adulterated,"  i.e. not proven/documented to have been manufactured in accordance with  CFR 820 CGMP requirements. In fact, if a company had developed a US  Class III (PMA) device, that company would have to provide the FDA a  detailed description of its QMS, as defined by 820, in its pre-market  approval (PMA) submission. In support of this, see the FDA’s general  reference at: 
http://www.fda.gov/medicaldevices/deviceregulationandguidance/howtomarketyourdevice/premarketsubmissions/premarketapprovalpma/ucm050384.htm, which in part states the following:
All manufacturers (including  specification developers) of Class II and III devices and select Class I devices are required to follow design controls [§820.30] during the  development of their device. The design control requirements are basic  controls needed to ensure that the device being designed will perform as intended when produced for commercial distribution.
TRUTHFUL AND ACCURATE
Part of the 510(k) submission is a Truthful and Accuracy  statement in which a senior manager certifies the submission is  truthful, accurate, and no substantial material has been purposefully  omitted. While one can argue that this only applies to the data in the  510(k), this author submits that, since the FDA expects the above to  have been done on the test samples and will be done for production,  agreement to those facts is also included in signing such a  certification. During a manufacturer’s first US FDA CGMP compliance  audit after marketing, the company will be audited per FDA QSIT (Quality System Inspection Technique) on its highest risk product, including its 510(k) (or PMA) and its DHF (per 820.30) along with other applicable  parts of 820. In fact, failure to follow such requirements would prevent accurate CAPA (Failure Investigation, Root Cause Analysis), P&PC  (process improvements over a device's life cycle) and similar continual  improvement, as well as assurance that the product in the field is safe  and effective and as cleared (510[k]) or approved (PMA). 
This column is not saying a 510(k) requires providing  information on a company's QMS, and it does not imply any pre-approval  QMS inspection for devices. The device must, however, have been  developed under CFR 820.30. Proven by the test data, the data supplied  in a 510(k) pertaining to its SE (substantial equivalence) to the  predicate must be performed on product manufactured under such a QMS  (CFR 820), as does all subsequent product. The FDA will then audit such  data during a future audit. 
Implied in the use of the term "certify" pertaining to the 510(k) as mentioned above, the truthful and accurate statement should  be viewed as providing such certification. The author has successfully  submitted numerous 510(k)s for clients to the FDA. Some FDA reviewers  request copies of a submitter’s SOPs defining the manufacturing and  testing requirements and proof of meeting the CGMPs for the device in  the 510(k). That is not to say this approach is the only way, but it is  one approach that has passed repeated tests with FDA reviewers. It is  also the approach the author makes clear to clients before agreeing to  accept an assignment.  
KNOW WHICH QMS IS OPERABLE
While adherence to CFR 820 should be obvious, the  discussion on applicable internet forums and many consultants’  experiences with clients desiring to submit a 510(k) shows that is often not the case. Further, anybody can interpret the 510(k) requirements in several ways (including different FDA reviewers/staff—see the FDA’s  510(k) Report of August 2010). A potential submitter should be aware of  all the issues/expectations in such a submission—implied as well as  stated.
If specification developers are separate from engineering  and manufacturing, then some combination of them or the ultimate owner  will be responsible to ensure that the applicable CGMP requirements are  met, documented, and available for audit. These different entities are  listed in the 510(k), although their respective QMS documentation  responsibilities are not listed but are nonetheless required.
COMPLETE SUBMISSIONS
Years ago, 510(k) with a few missing data points could be  submitted and the intervening 90 days could be used to "fill in the  blanks" that had to be completed prior to going to market. This is no  longer an option since under current FDA policy; the submission is now  immediately reviewed (within 15 days). Review uses its Acceptance  Checklist, filled out and included as part of the submission, and a  defined time period is given to address any problems, or the submission  is Refuse to Accept (RTA), the fee is lost, and a new submission is  required. See the following:
If questions pertaining to the submitted data still exist  after the applicant successfully meets the RTA process, then there is  usually an automatic 180-day extension granted by FDA. This means the  basics have already been addressed during that initial RTA check. If  such questions involve some issues with 820.30 data or other issues such as basic product verification, validation, functional testing,  biocompatibility, sterilization, etc., they may not be able to be  addressed acceptably within the deadlines stated by the FDA. It is much  better to have all work done prior to submission so that any extra  review time granted can be used to address other specific device issues.  
CONCLUSION
Knowing which QMS is operable, under what circumstances,  and in which markets, is critical to compliance and to the accuracy of  subsequent documentation in meeting regulatory requirements.  Understanding that though ISO 13485 and 21 CFR 820 QMS requirements have many similarities, they are different documents with different  requirements and different regulatory oversight. Understanding these  differences will prevent errors and omissions, insure a common ground  for discussion, and ensure the necessary compliance as proven by the  documentation.  
GLOSSARY
510(k): A 510(K) is a premarket submission made to FDA to demonstrate that the  device to be marketed is at least as safe and  effective, that is, substantially equivalent, to a legally            marketed device that is not subject to premarket  approval (PMA).
CDRH:  US FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health
CGMPs: Current Good Manufacturing Practices (Devices 21 CFR Part 820 Quality System Regulations; Drugs 210/211; Biologics  600- 680; and HCT/P 1271)
CFR:  US Code of Federal Regulation
DHF:  Design History File (21 CFR 820.30)
DHR:  Device History [batch/lot] Record (21 CFR 820.184)
EU MDD: European Union Medical Device Directives
FDA:  United States Food and Drug Administration
ISO:  International Standards Organization 
PMA: FDA Pre-Market Approval (for the majority of Class III devices, involving clinical data)
QA:  Quality Assurance
RA:  Regulatory Affairs
R&D:  Research and Development 
SOP:  Standard Operating Procedure
 
 
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