FDA Issues Draft Guidance on Factors to Consider When Making Benefit-Risk Determinations for IDEs Alert


The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently issued a draft guidance titled, “Factors to Consider When Making Benefit-Risk Determinations for Medical Device Investigational Device Exemptions (IDEs).” According to the FDA, “[t]he purpose of this guidance is to provide greater clarity for FDA staff and investigational device exemption (IDE) sponsors and sponsor-investigators regarding the principal factors that FDA considers when assessing the benefits and risks of IDE applications for human clinical studies.”

The early sections of the draft guidance summarize familiar principles of IDEs, including informed consent, the regulatory standard for IDE decisions, the types of IDE decisions, study design considerations, stages of device development and the associated varying uncertainty and risk tolerance, and the general benefit-risk determination in the IDE context.

The final section of the draft guidance includes a fairly lengthy discussion of the many specific considerations that go into making benefit-risk determinations for IDEs. Overall, “FDA recommends using a benefit-risk framework to facilitate the incorporation of evidence and knowledge from different domains—clinical, nonclinical, and patient—to support a comprehensive, balanced decision-making approach.” The specific factors addressed in the draft guidance are summarized below:

Patient preference – consistent with another recent draft guidance (summarized here) on obtaining valid scientific evidence of patient preferences, FDA reiterates that “[w]hen available, information characterizing subject tolerance for risk and perspective on benefit may provide useful context for assessing the benefits and risk of a proposed clinical investigation.”

Investigational device description – a complete and accurate understanding of the investigational device is important to the IDE decision.

Risk assessment – in general, the draft guidance recommends IDE sponsors use an accepted method of risk assessment, such as ANSI/AAMI/ISO 14971 on which the draft guidance relies. The type of risks identified are:

Assessment of Direct Benefit to Study Subjects – Factors include:

Assessment of benefits to others – includes the benefit of the knowledge to be gained

Other factors to consider:

The draft guidance elaborates somewhat on many of these factors and concludes with two appendices, the first setting forth a proposed outline for sponsors to follow when summarizing the primary benefits and risks of a proposed IDE and the second setting forth hypothetical examples.

A copy of the draft guidance document can be found here.


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National Law Review, Volume V, Number 173