While Dr. Westgard has given a thorough update on the status of EP22 and EP23, as presented at the AACC/ASCLS conference in Washington, DC, and Dr. Jan Krouwer has done the same on his own blog, I thought it worth beating the dead horse on this.
Dr. Jan Krouwer was there at the presentation and asked perhaps the most important question about EP22 since it was created. Is the FDA going to review the Risk information created by manufacturers about their instruments?
I think the answer was somewhat nuanced and subject to interpretation. According to Dr. Krouwer, he heard that the FDA would review EP22 Risk information, but only superficially, and "only egregious problems would be flagged by the FDA."
Basically, I heard the same thing, with a slightly different interpretation: the FDA isn't really going to review the Risk information when the device is first submitted to them. But retrospectively, it might review them very thoroughly. Since the FDA has authority over labeling and branding of medical devices, if it turns out that some of the risk information from a manufacturer is incorrect, inaccurate, or misleading, than the FDA retains the power to sanction the manufacturer.
In other words, manufacturers have the right to remain silent (i.e. don't produce any Risk information, since EP22 is voluntary), and anything they say (i.e. the EP22 Risk information) can be used against them in a court of law.
Call it the Manufacturer's Miranda Risk Rights.
In the absence of a legal mandate, I don't see why any manufacturer would willingly create this Risk information and distribute it to their customers. Any corporate lawyer will be advising against it (liability exposure). Any marketer will argue against it (if our competitors aren't saying they have residual risks, why do we need to do so?). Any executive will oppose it (why are we exposing our weaknesses to our competitors and our customers?). And that's the just the internal opposition this will face.
Certainly, I believe disclosure of Risk is the right thing to do, but the competitive and legal environment are not going to be receptive to it. Unless customers overwhelmingly demand this information, manufacturers will have no incentive - and many disincentives - to produce Risk information.
As Dr. Krouwer laments, there is a lot of good work in the EP22 and EP23 guidelines, but because of the toxic environment, these standards are likely to be stillborn.
Yet another sorry milepost in the story of EQC, AQC and Option 4.
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