Last week, three editors at influential medical journals largely dismissed two studies that the medical device industry has been parading around as evidence of failures at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Those studies are part of a campaign to show how the industry has been chafing under uncertainty with the agency’s device review process and how that has affected innovation and business prospects of small companies.
However, the editors of the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of American Medical Association and Archives of Internal Medicine found one study in particular — conducted by Josh Makower and a medical student at Stanford University – to be so flawed that they feel the results are meaningless. In fact, that study was quoted in a letter that Minnesota’s entire congressional delegation sent to the FDAwith a request to explain why so few investigational device exemptions were granted in fiscal 2010.
Instead of commenting on whether the criticisms of Makower’s study and that of the California Healthcare Institute were valid, Minnesota’s LifeScience Alley, a trade association, sought to highlight another study. The organization recently hired an executive to advocate for its members and the industry overall in Washington, D.C.

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