Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4092533 | SAS Journal | 2007 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Medical device reporting is an important yet highly anecdotal and incomplete event-tracking process. However, it is the principal means available in the United States for obtaining information on the clinical performance of a device after its approval for sale and does provide some data, albeit imperfect, in this regard. The cumulative medical device reports through the 18 months following FDA approval, measured against the number of devices dispensed, suggests a rate of adverse events that either tracks or is somewhat less than that reported in the IDE study. This suggests that a repeat of the “cage rage,” a “lumbar arthroplasty rage,” has not yet occurred.
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Authors
Scott L. MD, Richard D. MD, Fred H. MD, PhD, Paul C. MD, John J. MD,