Make your Life Easier with the FREE Forms, ready for use in the Resource Center
1) Defining and Substantiating Device Claims
- Non-clinical claims: These are technical in nature and based on non-clinical data, such as standards compliance, technology use, sterility, or mechanical performance.
- Clinical claims: These relate to safety, performance, or clinical benefits—such as improved patient outcomes or reduced complication rates—and must be substantiated with appropriate clinical evidence.
2. Literature Search, Vigilance Search, and Appraisal Plan
- State of the Art (SOTA) Search: This provides the clinical background, current knowledge, and alternative treatment options in the field, establishing a benchmark for assessing the device under evaluation.
- Device Under Evaluation (DUE) Search: This focuses specifically on the subject device (and equivalent devices, if applicable) to gather direct evidence of safety and performance.
3. Documenting Clinical Investigation(s)
Conclusion
A strong CER is built on consistency, traceability, and scientific rigor. By systematically structuring device claims (and defining acceptance criteria), implementing transparent and reproducible search methodologies (SOTA and DUE) with consistent appraisal, and documenting clinical investigations—or thoroughly justifying why they are not performed—manufacturers can significantly reduce Notified Body questions, avoid evidence gaps, and demonstrate full control of their clinical evaluation strategy. Ultimately, this approach does more than support compliance: it builds confidence that the clinical evaluation is complete, reliable, and aligned with MDR expectations.