population and performance). Clinical investigation
of software rest on content validity (context of use
and concept of interest), construct validity, reliability
and sensitivity to change. It is the most difficult path
because it is long, risky and expensive. It is
nevertheless mandatory for all class III and
implantable MDs (Chapter VI, art 61 MDR),
including our software, except in special cases
introduced in the MDR 2017/745. For example,
equivalence can be applied if both manufacturers
have concluded an agreement allowing full and
permanent access to the technical documents
necessary to achieve equivalence, which may
severely limit the use of equivalence for clinical
evaluations. Equivalence can also be used within the
same group or the same manufacturer for range
upgrades.
Conformity assessments will require more
qualitative clinical evidence and data to demonstrate
the performance and safety of a device, the evaluation
of adverse side effects and the acceptability of the
benefit-risk ratio than ever before. Indeed, notified
bodies will be uncompromising in terms of the quality
and quantity of clinical data collected.
New documents will be requested for Class III
MDs including our software. The Summary of Safety
and Clinical Performance Characteristics (SSCP),
and the PSUR previously described in paragraph 5.1.
The SSCP is particularly useful to fight against the
lack of transparency since it will be published to the
public on the Eudamed platform. Moreover, the
clinical evaluation plan will be submitted to a
European expert group for decision upstream of the
clinical evaluation.
In conclusion, clinical evaluation is a continuous
process initiated for device certification and then
constantly updated with post-marketing surveillance.
6 CONCLUSION
We proposed to develop a MD software designed to
help paediatric drug preparation and care of cardiac
arrest during resuscitation with the aim to
significantly reduce the occurrence of medication
errors, anxiety and improve feeling of self-efficacy of
caregivers. Coupled with a feasibility and usability
study, the results of the pilot study will be used to
build a pivotal study that will demonstrate the real
interest of our software in the care of the child in vital
distress. It could have the potential to change
paediatric clinical practice in the area of emergency
medicine.
However, many steps remain to be taken in order
to market a product that complies with the
regulations, but our work presented the interest of
building the evaluations in parallel to the product
development (technical, but also regulatory, business,
market point of view), each one feeding the other one.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors would like to thanks the students (Ida
Olsza, Antoine Giret, Clément Francioli, Léo
Martinet, Florian Zaouisand and Yaping Xu) for their
involvement in the project.
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