The Food and Drug Administration today announced a voluntary pilot program to expedite approvals of certain changes to ethylene oxide sterilization processes and facilities. Under the pilot program, facilities that use fixed-chamber ethylene oxide sterilization processes to sterilize single-use medical devices would submit a “master file” to the FDA when making certain changes to their location or changes to their sterilization processes that use lower ethylene oxide concentrations. The FDA believes the program will allow more efficient review and feedback, ultimately allowing the agency to provide a more nimble response to site closures in the future. In addition, FDA said it will work with 12 applicants to its innovation challenges to accelerate the development and review of innovative technologies for sterilization processes, and is moving forward with certain recommendations from its recent advisory committee meeting.

Related News Articles

Chairperson's File
Public
This year I’ll be continuing the AHA Leadership Dialogue series and talking with health care, business and community leaders on trending topics in the field.…
Headline
Olympus has expanded a voluntary recall of its ViziShot 2 FLEX Needles due to complaints of device components ejecting or attaching during…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration has identified a recall by Cook Medical of Zenith Alpha 2 Thoracic Endovascular Graft proximal components after Cook Medical…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration announced Dec. 5 that it will launch the Technology-Enabled Meaningful Patient Outcomes for Digital Health Devices Pilot, or…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of Baxter Life2000 Ventilation Systems due to a cybersecurity issue discovered through…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of Max Mobility/Permobil SpeedControl Dials used with the SmartDrive MX2+ Power Assist Device…