Advocate General Opinion on Software Medical Devices
On 28 June 2017, Advocate General Sanchez-Bordona (AG) presented his opinion in case C-329/16 Syndicat national de l’industrie des technologies médicales and Philips France following
a request for preliminary ruling from the Conseil d’État (France) to
the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) concerning the laws
governing the classification of software medical devices.
The AG’s opinion is not binding on the CJEU, but
it provides useful guidance on the application of the EU medical devices
Directive 93/42/EEC (the MDD) to software programs. Importantly, it
confirms the position set out in the Commission’s MEDDEV 2.1/6 guidance that software which merely stores and archives data is not a medical device; the software must perform an action on data (i.e., it must interpret and/or change the data).
EU national courts use the preliminary ruling
procedure if they are in doubt about the interpretation or validity of
an EU law. In such cases, they may ask the CJEU for advice. The Advocate
Generals provide the CJEU with public and impartial opinions to assist
the Court in its decision making. The Advocate Generals’ opinions are
advisory and non-binding, but they are nonetheless influential. In the
majority of cases the CJEU follows the Advocate General.
Background
Philips France (Philips) manufactures and places
on the EU market a software program called Intellispace Critical Care
and Anesthesia (ICCA), which is used by physicians to provide
information necessary for the proper administration of medicines for the
purposes of resuscitation and anaesthesia. The software highlights
possible contraindications, interactions with other medicines and
excessive dosing. Philips classified the ICCA as a medical device under
the MDD and the product bears a CE mark confirming that the software
complies with the applicable requirements of the MDD.
Under French law, software programs intended to
support medical prescriptions are subject to national certification
requirements. The French Government’s position is that the ICCA must
comply with this national certification requirement. Further, it does
not consider the ICCA to be a medical device within the meaning of
Article 1(2)(a) of the MDD because the function of assisting with
prescriptions does not fall under any of the defined purposes within the
definition of a medical device.
Philips claimed that the national certification
requirement should not apply as it amounted to a restriction on import,
contrary to EU law, and that the French Government was in breach of
Article 4(1) of the MDD, which provides that Member States must not
restrict the placing on the market or the putting into service of
medical devices bearing the CE mark within their territory.
The French Conseil d’État referred to the CJEU a
request for a preliminary ruling on the question of whether software
equivalent to the ICCA satisfies the definition of a medical device
under the MDD.
AG Opinion
The AG opinion suggests that Philips had correctly
classified the ICCA as a medical device. It highlights that since the
ICCA bears a CE mark and is freely marketed in 17 EU Member States, it
benefits from a presumption of conformity with the MDD. It was a matter
for the French Government to rebut this presumption, and it had failed
to do so.
In reaching his conclusion, the AG highlighted a number of points, including:
- In order to qualify as a medical device, software must have a function beyond collection and archiving of data (i.e., it must have more than a purely administrative function). Rather, it must modify or interpret the data. The ICCA software includes an engine that allows healthcare professionals to calculate the prescription of medications and the duration of treatments. In light of such functions, the AG considers it difficult to maintain that the ICCA does not have a diagnostic or therapeutic purpose within the scope of the definition of a medical device. The ICCA is not a software program that is limited to administrative functions, but rather software that helps determine the proper prescription for the patient. It is therefore a medical device as it has the aim of “preventing, controlling, treating or alleviating a disease”.
- The fact that the ICCA does not act by itself in or on the human body does not preclude it from classification as a medical device. Contributing to the principal action of correcting the human body through the taking of medicinal products is sufficient.
The above conclusion endorses the position set out
in the Commission MEDDEV 2.1/6 guidance on qualification and
classification of standalone software, which states:
“…if the software does not perform an action on data, or performs an action limited to storage, archival, communication, ‘simple search’ or lossless compression (i.e. using a compression procedure that allows the exact reconstruction of the original data) it is not a medical device.”
Read More: https://globalcompliancepaneltraining.wordpress.com/2017/08/10/advocate-general-opinion-on-software-medical-devices/
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