March 19, 2024
Artificial intelligence or AI isn’t going anywhere, and the FDA is the latest agency to recognize its potential to revolutionize healthcare by advancing medical product development, improving patient care, and expanding the capabilities of healthcare practitioners in its new paper, “Artificial Intelligence and Medical Products: How CBER, CDER, CDRH, and OCP are Working Together.” The paper seeks to provide greater transparency regarding how FDA’s medical product Centers[1] are collaborating to safeguard public health while fostering responsible and ethical innovation. Developed to reaffirm the FDA’s commitment to promoting the development, deployment, use, and maintenance of medical products that incorporate or are developed with AI, the paper describes the actions that these Centers are taking or intend to take regarding the uses of AI across the medical product life cycle, and is organized around the following four areas of focus: (i) Fostering Collaboration to Safeguard Public Health, (ii) Advance the Development of Regulatory Approaches that Support Innovation, (iii) Promote the Development of Harmonized Standards, Guidelines, Best Practices, and Tools, and (iv) Support Research Related to the Evolution and Monitoring of AI Performance.
With respect to Fostering Collaboration to Safeguard Public Health, the Agency intends to:
With respect to Advancing the Development of Regulatory Approaches that Support Innovation, the Centers intend to develop policies that provide regulatory predictability and clarity for the use of AI, which includes:
With respect to Promoting the Development of Harmonized Standards, Guidelines, Best Practices, and Tools, the Agency will:
Finally, with respect to Supporting Research Related to the Evolution and Monitoring of AI Performance, the Centers plan to support projects that:
[1] The Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH), and Office of Combination Products (OCP) are jointly publishing this paper and are referred to as the “FDA’s medical product Centers” or “Centers.”
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