FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health explained

Agency Name:CDRH
Type:Center
Formed:1982
Preceding1:Bureau of Medical Devices
Preceding2:Bureau of Radiological Health
Jurisdiction:HHS
Headquarters:White Oak Campus; Silver Spring, MD
Employees:2,230 (2023) [1]
Chief1 Name:Michelle Tarver M.D., Ph.D, Director
Website:FDA CDRH

The Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) is one of six product centers of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), an agency that is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). CDRH is responsible for ensuring that patients and providers in the U.S. have timely and continued access to safe, effective, and high-quality medical devices and safe radiation-emitting products.

Examples of products that CDRH regulates include medical devices ranging from tongue depressors and personal protective equipment (PPE) to pacemakers and robotic surgical systems, and medical and non-medical radiation-emitting electronic products such as lasers, x-ray systems, ultrasound equipment, microwave ovens, and color televisions.

As of October 2024, the Director of CDRH is Michelle Tarver M.D., Ph.D.

Organization structure

CDRH consists of seven offices that work in collaboration to assure that consumers have access to safe and effective medical products.

Office of Product Evaluation and Quality

The Office of Product Evaluation and Quality (OPEQ), one of the seven offices in CDRH, is structured to monitor the entirety of a medical product's evolution. Pre-market and post-market teams work together to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of medical devices. OPEQ houses the Office of Health Technologies (OHT), which is further subdivided into 8 offices by device type. Each office performs reviews of products over their lifecycle.

Office of Ophthalmic, Anesthesia, Respiratory, ENT and Dental DevicesOHT1Examples: contact lenses, snoring/sleep devices, dental ceramics
Office of Cardiovascular DevicesOHT2Examples: pacemakers, heart valves, ECGs, AEDs
Office of Gastrorenal, ObGyn, General Hospital, and Urology DevicesOHT3Examples: hemodialysis machines, tampons, IUDs
Office of Surgical and Infection Control DevicesOHT4 Examples: robotic surgery devices, wound care devices
Office of Neurological and Physical Medicine DevicesOHT5 Examples: cerebral stents, BCI devices, cerebral aneurysm clips
Office of Orthopedic DevicesOHT6 Examples: hip replacement implants, orthopedic plates, orthopedic screws
Office of In Vitro DiagnosticsOHT7 Examples: COVID-19 tests, pregnancy tests, HIV diagnostic tests
Office of Radiological HealthOHT8 Examples: MRI machines, x-ray systems, microwaves

History

Medical devices first came under comprehensive regulation with the passage of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938 (FD&C),[9] which replaced the earlier Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906. The FD&C allowed the FDA to perform factory inspections and prohibited misbranded marketing of cosmetic and therapeutic medical devices.[10] In the 1970s, Congress responded to the public's desire for additional oversight over medical devices by passing the Medical Device Amendments of 1976 (MDA) to the FD&C. The MDA established a risk-based framework for the classification of medical devices and a regulatory pathway for medical devices to get to the market, created a regulatory pathway for medical device clinical trials, and established several post-market requirements including manufacturer registration and device listing with the FDA, good manufacturing practices (GMPs), and reporting of adverse events.

Another predecessor of CDRH was the Public Health Service's Division of Radiological Health, which was formed in the late 1950s within the Environmental Health Divisions of the Bureau of State Services.[11] In 1970, as part of the Public Health Service reorganizations of 1966–1973, this division was split, with part going to the new Environmental Protection Agency[12] [13] and part moving into FDA.[14]

In 1982, the organizational units at the FDA that regulated medical devices and radiation-emitting products merged to form the Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH).

Former leaders of CDRH[15]

Medical Device Legislation Milestones

CDRH mission and vision

The CDRH vision is that patients in the U.S. have access to high-quality, safe, and effective medical devices. CDRH works diligently to advance and interweave innovation and safety priorities to fulfill the mission of protecting and promoting public health.

Strategic priorities

In order to maintain and continuously improve the vision for high-quality safe and effective medical devices for all patients, CDRH regularly develops strategic priorities.[16] The following were established for 2022 – 2025.

Promote a Modern and Diverse Workforce: CDRH strives to prepare the organization so it is exceedingly proactive, flexible, resilient, collaborative, and engaged.

Enhance Organizational Agility and Resilience: CDRH makes efforts to adapt and redesign business processes, approaches, and policies to anticipate the needs of the future.

Advance Health Equity: CDRH aims to advance the development of knowledge and safe and effective technologies to meet the needs of all patients and consumers.

CDRH initiatives

Continuing partnerships with patients

Initiatives to encourage innovation and collaboration with innovators

Initiatives to encourage safety and quality

Initiatives to enhance regulatory flexibility

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CDRH 2023 Annual Report. FDA . 3 April 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  2. Web site: Office of the Center Director. August 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  3. Web site: Office of Policy. 30 October 2023 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  4. Web site: Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation. 24 January 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  5. Web site: Office of Product Evaluation and Quality. 26 September 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  6. Web site: Office of Communication, Information Disclosure, Training and Education. 16 July 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  7. Web site: Office of Management. 23 January 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  8. Web site: Office of Science and Engineering Laboratories. 24 September 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  9. Web site: The History of Medical and Radiation-Emitting Device Regulation. FDA . 9 August 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  10. Schlauderaff . Abraham . Boyer. Kaleigh . May 9, 2019. An Overview of Food and Drug Administration Medical Device Legislation and Interplay with Current Medical Practices. Cureus. 11 . 5. e4627. 10.7759/cureus.4627. free . 31312553 . 6615584 .
  11. Book: Programs of the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare: An Executive Reference Book . U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare . 1959 . 27.
  12. Web site: 2016-08-15 . Records of the Environmental Protection Agency [EPA] ]. 2021-04-23 . National Archives . Section 412.2 . en.
  13. Web site: Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1970 . 2021-04-23 . U.S. Environmental Protection Agency . en.
  14. Web site: 2006-01-09 . CDRH Milestones . 2020-08-29 . U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
  15. Web site: CDRH Leadership. Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  16. Web site: CDRH Strategic Priorities and Updates. 5 August 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  17. Web site: Division of Patient-Centered Development. 19 January 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  18. Web site: CDRH Patient Engagement Advisory Committee. FDA . 24 September 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  19. Web site: CDRH Patient and Caregiver Connection. FDA . 24 June 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  20. Web site: Collaborative Communities: Addressing Health Care Challenges Together. FDA . 20 September 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  21. Web site: Breakthrough Devices Program. FDA . 9 August 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  22. Web site: Safer Technologies Program (SteP) for Medical Devices. FDA . 15 August 2023 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  23. Web site: Safety and Performance Based Pathway. Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  24. Web site: Digital Health Center of Excellence. 26 September 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  25. Web site: Total Product Life Cycle Advisory Program. Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  26. Web site: Catalog of Regulatory Science Tools to Help Assess New Medical Devices. FDA . 26 September 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  27. Web site: Home as a Health Care Hub. FDA . 6 August 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  28. Web site: Understanding Barriers to Medical Device Quality. Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  29. Web site: Case for Quality. FDA . 9 August 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  30. Web site: Federal Register Medical Devices; Quality System Regulation Amendments. 2 February 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  31. Web site: Office of Supply Chain Resilience. FDA . April 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .
  32. Web site: Real World Evidence. 19 September 2024 . Food and Drug Administration . October 25, 2024 .