The FDA has issued a clarification  regarding medical device manufacturers’ and importers’ compliance with malfunction report rules according to the agency’s Medical Device Reporting regulation.
The requirements temporarily cover not only high-risk devices but  also Class I and II devices that are not permanently implantable,  life-supporting or life-sustaining.
The Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007 (FDAAA)  requires manufacturers and importers of Class III as well as permanently  implantable or life-supporting Class II devices to submit malfunction  reports unless granted exemptions by the US Secretary of Health and  Human Services or FDA. The FDAAA changed such rules for Class I and  low-risk Class II devices, requiring quarterly reporting of malfunctions  in summary form, except in instances where the regulator deems a device  subject to stricter reporting rules in order to protect public health.  In such instances, the FDA will notify those device manufacturers or  importers in writing—or post a Federal Register notice—that they would  have to provide malfunction reports in a manner that fully complies with  the FDA’s Medical Device Reporting rule.
For the time being, however, the FDA will now require all devices to  malfunction reporting requirements previously targeting higher-risk  devices. The agency plans to more clearly define which devices fall  under the less rigorous quarterly malfunction reporting category. In the  meantime, the FDA’s clarification states that the agency will subject  all devices to more exacting reporting requirements “in order to protect  the public health by ensuring that there is no gap in malfunction  reporting for any device.”
Interested parties may submit written or electronic comments on the clarification until May 9.