Implementation of Device Registration and Listing Requirements Enacted in the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002, the Medical Device User Fee and Modernization Act of 2002, and Title II of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007, 14510-14538 [2010-6662]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Part 807
[Docket No. FDA–2009–N–0114]
RIN 0910–AF88
Implementation of Device Registration
and Listing Requirements Enacted in
the Public Health Security and
Bioterrorism Preparedness and
Response Act of 2002, the Medical
Device User Fee and Modernization
Act of 2002, and Title II of the Food and
Drug Administration Amendments Act
of 2007
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
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ACTION:
Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration is proposing to amend
its regulations governing medical device
establishment registration and device
listing. The proposed revisions would
modify FDA’s current regulations at part
807 (21 CFR part 807) to reflect recent
statutory amendments to the device
registration and listing provisions of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(FD&C Act). The Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of
2007 (FDAAA), which was enacted on
September 27, 2007, amended section
510 of the FD&C Act by requiring
domestic and foreign device
establishments to begin submitting their
registration and device listing
information to FDA by electronic means
rather than on paper forms, and also
specified the timeframes when
establishments are required to submit
such information. In accordance with
FDAAA, the agency launched FDA’s
Unified Registration and Listing System
(FURLS), and Internet-based registration
and listing system. FDAAA requires
electronic submission of device
registration and listing information
unless FDA grants a waiver request.
In addition, this proposal would
facilitate FDA’s collection of additional
registration information from foreign
establishments as required by the Public
Health Security and Bioterrorism
Preparedness and Response Act of 2002
(Bioterrorism Act). It also would update
certain provisions in part 807 to
improve the quality of registration and
listing information available to FDA.
FDA relies on having complete and
accurate registration and listing
information in order to accomplish a
number of important public health
objectives.
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DATES: Submit written or electronic
comments on the proposed rule by June
24, 2010. Submit comments on
information collection issues under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 by
April 26, 2010, (see the ‘‘Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995’’ section of this
document). See sections IX and X of this
document for the proposed effective and
proposed compliance dates of a final
rule based on this document.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. FDA–2009–N–
0114 and RIN number 0910–AF88, by
any of the following methods, except
that comments on information
collection issues under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 must be
submitted to the Office of Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) at FAX: 202–395–7285,
or e-mail comments to
OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov. Please
mark your comments to the attention of
the FDA desk officer and reference this
rule.
Electronic Submissions
Submit electronic comments in the
following way:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Written Submissions
Submit written submissions in the
following ways:
• FAX: 301–827–6870.
• Mail/Hand delivery/Courier [For
paper, disk, or CD–ROM submissions]:
Division of Dockets Management (HFA–
305), Food and Drug Administration,
5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville,
MD 20852.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
Docket No(s). and Regulatory
Information Number (RIN) (if a RIN
number has been assigned) for this
rulemaking. All comments received may
be posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. For
additional information on submitting
comments, see the ‘‘Comments’’ heading
of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov and insert the
docket number found in brackets in the
heading of this document into the
‘‘Search’’ box and follow the prompts
and/or go to the Division of Dockets
Management, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Theresa McDonald, Center for Devices
and Radiological Health (HFZ–307),
PO 00000
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Food and Drug Administration, 10903
New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring, MD
20993–0002, 301–796–5823.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary of Current Registration and
Listing Requirements
A. Summary of Section 510 of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360)
B. Summary of Current Registration
and Listing Regulations
III. Highlights of the Proposed Changes
to the Current Registration and Listing
Requirements
IV. Description of the Proposed Rule
A. General
B. Registration
C. Listing
D. Electronic Format
E. Miscellaneous
F. Conforming Actions
V. Legal Authority
VI. Analysis of Economic Impacts
A. The Need for Regulation
B. Background
C. The Proposed Regulation
D. Estimated Impacts
E. Impact on Small Entities
VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
A. Statutory Compliance
B. Transition Process From Paper to
Electronic Submission
VIII. Environmental Impact
IX. Proposed Effective Date
X. Proposed Compliance Dates
XI. Federalism
XII. Request for Comments
XIII. References
I. Background
We originally published
establishment registration regulations
for medical devices in the Federal
Register of September 3, 1976 (41 FR
37458) (proposed rule) and August 23,
1977 (42 FR 42520) (final rule), and
device listing regulations in the Federal
Register of September 30, 1977 (42 FR
52808) (proposed rule), and August 25,
1978 (43 FR 37990) (final rule).
These regulations called for
establishment registration and device
listing information to be submitted to
the Center for Devices and Radiological
Health (CDRH) on several paper forms:
FDA 2891, Registration of Device
Establishment; FDA 2891a, Annual
Registration of Device Establishment;
and FDA 2892, Device Listing. Once
these forms were completed and
submitted to FDA, FDA then forwarded
them to a data entry contractor who
entered the information into FDA’s
device registration and listing database.
In June 2002, section 321 of the
Bioterrorism Act amended section 510(i)
of the FD&C Act to require those foreign
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establishments who are required to
register with FDA to do so by electronic
means, and to include additional
information identifying certain parties
involved in the importation of the
foreign establishment’s devices into the
United States as part of their
registration. Subsequently, in October
2002, section 207 of MDUFMA further
amended section 510 of the FD&C Act
by extending the requirement for
electronic submission of registration
information to include domestic firms
as well as foreign firms. However, when
adding these new electronic submission
requirements, which appear in section
510(p) of the FD&C Act, Congress chose
to delay their implementation so that
FDA would have an opportunity to first
put systems in place to accommodate
the electronic receipt of registration
information. This was accomplished by
including a requirement in section
510(p) of the FD&C Act for the Secretary
of the Department of Health and Human
Services (the Secretary) to make a
finding that the electronic receipt of
registration information was feasible
before implementing electronic
registration.
As reflected in FDAAA, the most
recent legislation establishing changes
to FDA’s device registration and listing
program, FDA has now developed a
system that makes the electronic receipt
of device registration and listing
information feasible. FDAAA amended
section 510(p) of the FD&C Act by
eliminating the need for a feasibility
finding and requiring both
establishment registration and device
listing information to be submitted
using electronic means unless FDA
grants a waiver request. In accordance
with FDAAA, FDA’s Unified
Registration and Listing System
(FURLS), which is a new Internet-based
system, became operational on October
1, 2007. FDA believes this electronic
system will ultimately make the process
of submitting registration and listing
information more efficient for industry
and will provide faster access to this
information for both FDA and industry.
In addition, the new electronic system
will allow FDA to more effectively
gather information concerning marketed
devices. We rely on having complete
and accurate registration and listing
information to accomplish a number of
important statutory and regulatory
objectives. For example, we use
registration and listing information to:
• Identify establishments producing
marketed medical devices;
• Identify establishments producing a
specific device when that device is in
short supply or is needed for a national
emergency. This information helps us
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facilitate prompt shipment of devices to
the places where they are needed most.
For example, during a bioterrorism
incident, we could use device listing
information to identify establishments
that could be helpful in preventing or
counteracting the deadly effects of
biological weapons; with this
information, we could facilitate prompt
shipment of the devices as needed;
• Facilitate the recall of devices
marketed by owners or operators of
device establishments;
• Identify and catalogue marketed
devices;
• Administer our postmarketing
surveillance programs for devices;
• Identify devices marketed in
violation of the law;
• Identify and control devices
imported or offered for import into the
country from foreign establishments;
and
• Schedule and plan inspections of
registered establishments under section
704 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 374).
We also rely on registration and
listing information to help us comply
with several other statutory provisions.
For example, we use this information to
generate accurate estimates of the
number of businesses that are affected
by our rulemaking activities. These
estimates help us assess the impact of
our regulations on regulated industry,
which we are required to do under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(Public Law 96–354) (5 U.S.C. 601–612),
as amended by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (Title II of Public Law 104–121);
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (Public Law 104–4) (2 U.S.C. 1501
et seq.); the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (the PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501–3520);
Executive Order 12866 (September 30,
1993); and the Congressional Review
Act (section 251 of Public Law 104–
121).
Registration and listing information
will continue to be used for all of the
important public health purposes
outlined previously. The electronic
submission of registration and listing
information allows us to use such
information more quickly and
effectively to carry out all of the
activities described previously.
In addition, electronic submission of
registration and listing information
furthers the purpose of the Government
Paperwork Elimination Act of 1998
(Public Law 105–277, Title XVII)
(GPEA). GPEA requires Federal agencies
to give persons who are required to
maintain, submit, or disclose
information, the option of doing so
electronically when practicable as a
substitute for paper, and to use
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electronic authentication (electronic
signature) methods to verify the identity
of the sender and the integrity of the
electronic content. We believe that
electronic submission of registration
and listing information furthers the
purpose of this law and makes the
registration and listing processes more
efficient and effective both for industry
and us.
II. Summary of Current Registration
and Listing Requirements
A. Summary of Section 510 of the FD&C
Act (21 U.S.C. 360)
Section 510 of the FD&C Act contains
the statutory requirements pertaining to
device registration and listing. Section
510(b), (c), and (d) of the FD&C Act
address registration obligations that
apply to domestic establishments.
Section 510(c) of the FD&C Act includes
the requirement for owners or operators
to immediately register their
establishment ‘‘upon first engaging in
the manufacture, preparation,
propagation, compounding, or
processing of * * * device or devices.’’
As clarified in section 510(a)(1) of the
FD&C Act, the term ‘‘manufacture,
preparation, propagation, compounding,
or processing’’ as used in section 510 is
intended to be rather broad and also
includes ‘‘repackaging or otherwise
changing the container, wrapper, or
labeling of any * * * device package in
furtherance of the distribution of the
* * * device from the original place of
manufacture to the person who makes
final delivery or sale to the ultimate
consumer or user.’’
In addition to the initial registration
requirement in section 510(c), owners or
operators of domestic device
establishments are also required to
renew their registrations on an annual
basis. Prior to FDAAA, section 510(b)
provided that such registration had to be
completed ‘‘[o]n or before December 31
of each year.’’ FDAAA amended the
timeframes in section 510(b) and now
requires annual registration to be
performed during the 3-month period
beginning on October 1 and ending on
December 31 of each year.
Section 510(d) of the FD&C Act
requires an owner or operator that has
previously registered an establishment
to immediately update his registration
information on file with the agency to
include any additional establishment
that he owns or operates in which he
begins the ‘‘manufacture, preparation,
propagation, compounding, or
processing’’ of a device or devices.
Section 510(i) of the FD&C Act
contains certain registration and listing
requirements that specifically pertain to
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foreign establishments. The owner or
operator of a foreign establishment has
to register and list with FDA if the
establishment is engaged in the
‘‘manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, or processing of * * * a
device that is imported or offered for
import into the United States.’’ Section
510(i) specifies that the registration and
listing information must be submitted to
FDA by electronic means, and also
requires the foreign establishments to
furnish, as part of their registration, ‘‘the
name of each importer of [the
establishment’s] device in the United
States that is known to the
establishment, and the name of each
person who imports or offers for import
such * * * device to the United States
for purposes of importation.’’ Prior to
the passage of FDAAA, section 510(i)
required foreign establishments to
complete their annual registration ‘‘[o]n
or before December 31 of each year.’’
FDAAA amended the timeframes in
section 510(i) and now requires annual
registration to be performed during the
3-month period beginning on October 1
and ending on December 31 of each
year.
Section 510(g) of the FD&C Act
establishes specific exemptions from
registration requirements and permits
the Secretary, under section 510(g)(5), to
create additional exemptions by
regulation where the Secretary finds
that registration by those persons is not
necessary for the protection of public
health.
Under section 510(e) of the FD&C Act,
we may assign a registration number to
any person or establishment who
registers. We may also prescribe a
uniform system for the identification of
devices intended for human use and
require that persons who are required to
list their devices do so in accordance
with such a system.
Section 510(f) of the FD&C Act is the
provision governing the public
availability of registration and listing
information that has been submitted to
FDA in accordance with section 510.
Section 510(j) of the FD&C Act
prescribes the requirements for device
listing. Section 510(j)(1) requires every
person who registers to file, at the time
of registration, a list of all devices that
are being ‘‘manufactured, prepared,
propagated, compounded, or processed
by him for commercial distribution’’ and
which have not been previously listed
by him or her. Section 510(j)(1) further
requires that the listing information be
prepared and submitted in the ‘‘form
and manner prescribed by the
Secretary.’’ Section 510(j)(2) of the FD&C
Act requires registrants to periodically
update their listing information. Prior to
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the passage of FDAAA, registrants were
required to update their device listings
two times each year, once in June and
once in December. As amended by
FDAAA, section 510(j)(2) now requires
device listing information to be updated
only once each year during the period
beginning on October 1 and ending on
December 31, which is the same 3month period during which
establishments are required to complete
their annual registration.
Section 510(p) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by FDAAA, requires the
electronic submission of device
registration and listing information
unless the Secretary grants a request for
a waiver because use of electronic
means is not reasonable for the person
requesting the waiver.
On October 8, 2009, FDA published
the document ‘‘Guidance for Industry
and FDA Staff—Implementation of
Medical Device Establishment
Registration and Device Listing
Requirements Established by the Food
and Drug Administration Amendments
Act of 2007.’’ The purpose of the
Guidance is to explain changes in the
device registration and listing program
that are required by Section 207 of the
Medical Device User Fee and
Modernization Act of 2002 and the Food
and Drug Administration Amendments
Act of 2007. Copies of the guidance can
be found on the Internet at: https://
www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/Device
RegulationandGuidance/Guidance
Documents/ucm185871.htm.
B. Summary of Current Registration and
Listing Regulations
1. Who Must Register and List Under
the Current Regulations?
Under current part 807 (21 CFR part
807) of FDA’s regulations, with certain
exceptions, owners or operators of
establishments that engage in the
manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, assembly, or processing
of a device intended for human use
must, in addition to other requirements,
register their establishments and submit
listing information for each of their
devices in commercial distribution.
FDA has interpreted the types of
establishments that must register and/or
list to include, among others,
manufacturers, contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers (currently
required to register and list only if they
also distribute the device commercially
on behalf of the party initiating the
specifications), specification developers,
remanufactures, repackages, re labelers,
single-use device (SUD) preprocessors,
and initial importers (these parties are
currently required to register but need
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not submit listing information). Foreign
device establishments that manufacture,
prepare, propagate, compound, process
or export a device that is imported or
offered for import into the United States
also must comply with the registration
and listing requirements, including the
requirement to identify a U.S. agent.
The current regulations provide for all
registration and listing information to be
submitted to us using paper forms FDA
2891, Registration of Device
Establishment; FDA 2891a, Annual
Registration of Device Establishment;
and FDA 2892, Device Listing, as
required by § 807.22.
2. What Are the Registration
Requirements Under the Current
Regulations?
The existing regulations in part 807
contain various provisions governing
the requirements for registration.
Among others, those provisions include
the following:
• Section 807.21(a) requires owners
or operators of establishments entering
into the manufacture, preparation,
propagation, compounding, assembly,
or processing of a device or devices to
register their establishment within 30
days after beginning such an activity at
their establishment.
• Sections 807.25 and 807.40 describe
the information required to be
submitted by owners or operators of
domestic and foreign establishments as
part of their registration. This
information includes:
• The names of the registered
establishment, its owner or operator,
and its official correspondent;
• Contact information for the official
correspondent;
• Trade names used by the
establishment;
• The types of operations or activities
conducted at the establishment; and
• The name and contact information
for their designated U.S. agent (applies
only to foreign establishments).
• Section 807.21(a) requires owners
or operators to renew their
establishment’s registration on an
annual basis in accordance with a
schedule specified in the regulations.
• Section 807.35 provides for FDA to
assign a permanent registration number
to each establishment after reviewing
the information provided to us on Form
FDA 2891 at the time of the
establishment’s initial registration.
3. What Are the Listing Requirements
Under the Current Regulations?
The listing provisions currently found
in part 807 include, among others, the
following:
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• Owners or operators of
establishments must, at the time of
registration, submit a list of devices
being manufactured or processed at the
establishment that are in commercial
distribution at that time using forms)
FDA 2892 (§ 807.21(a)).
• The device listing information
required to be submitted to us under
§ 807.25(f) includes, but is not limited to
the classification name and number for
the device (in practice, the product code
assigned to the device by FDA is
ordinarily provided rather than the
classification name and number); the
proprietary and common names
associated with the device; the name
and FDA-assigned identification
number of the owner or operator; the
name, registration number, and
establishment type of all establishments
under the joint ownership and control
of the owner or operator at which the
device is manufactured, repackaged, or
re labeled; the number assigned by FDA
to an approved application for each
device listed that is subject to pre
market review under section 505 of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 355) or section 515
of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360e) (in
practice, the owners and operators are
also providing 510(k) clearance and
Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE)
numbers); the reason for the submission
(e.g., represents a new device listing, an
update to an existing listing, or the
device is being discontinued); and if the
listing relates to a previously listed
device, as in the case of an update, the
initial listing number for the device.
• The current regulations at
§ 807.30(b) require owners or operators
to update their device listing
information twice each year during June
and December, or at their discretion, at
the time the change occurs. Updated
information must include, but need not
be limited to:
• A list of each device introduced by
the registrant for commercial
distribution that has not been included
in any previously-submitted list;
• All previously-listed devices for
which commercial distribution has been
discontinued;
• A list of all devices for which a
notice of discontinuance was submitted
and for which commercial distribution
has since that time been resumed; and
• Information about any other
material change to listed products, as
required under current § 807.30(b).
4. Who Is Not Covered by Registration
and Listing Requirements Under the
Current Regulation?
Under the current regulations, certain
establishments are exempt from the
registration and listing requirements set
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forth in part 807. Section 510(g) of the
FD&C Act, which establishes certain
exemptions from registration
requirements, authorized FDA to
exempt additional classes of persons
from registration requirements by
regulation when we determine that
registration by those persons is not
necessary for the protection of the
public health. (21 U.S.C. 360(g)). These
exemptions are reflected in our
regulations at § 807.65. Section 807.65
provides an exemption from registration
requirements for the following types of
establishments:
• A manufacturer of raw materials or
components;
• A manufacturer of veterinary
devices;
• A manufacturer of common and
widely-used laboratory equipment and/
or chemical reagents not labeled or
promoted for medical use; and
• Carriers whose business it is to
transport and deliver devices.
Section 807.65 further exempts from
registration requirements the following
types of establishments, provided they
are domestic establishments:
• Licensed practitioners, including
physicians, dentists, and optometrists,
who manufacture or otherwise alter
devices solely for use in their
professional practice;
• Persons who manufacture, prepare,
propagate, compound or process devices
solely for use in research, teaching, or
analysis, and do not introduce such
devices into commercial distribution;
• Pharmacies, surgical supply outlets,
or other similar retail establishments
making final delivery or sale to the
ultimate user; and
• Persons who dispense previouslymanufactured devices or render services
to the ultimate consumer (i.e., patient,
physician, layman, etc.), such as a
hearing aid dispenser, optician, clinical
laboratory, assembler of diagnostic x-ray
systems, as well as personnel from a
hospital, clinic, dental laboratory,
orthoepic or prosthetic retail facility
whose primary responsibility to the
ultimate consumer is to dispense or
provide a service through the use of a
previously manufactured device.
Additionally, under current
§ 807.20(c), establishment registration
and device listing requirements do not
apply to any person who:
• Manufactures the device for another
party who initiated the specifications
and distributes the device;
• Sterilizes the device on a contract
basis for another party who distributes
the device; or
• Acts only as a wholesale distributor
and does not manufacture, repackage,
process, or re label the device.
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5. Do the Current Regulations Permit the
Disclosure of Registration and Listing
Information?
Section 807.37 of the current
regulations addresses the extent to
which registration and listing
information submitted to us will be
available for public disclosure and the
procedure for obtaining access to such
information. Specifically, that provision
states that all registration information
submitted by an establishment on forms
FDA 2891 and FDA 2891a will be made
available for inspection at the CDRH
Office of Compliance in Maryland and
also at the district office that has
responsibility for that establishment. In
practice, these documents are no longer
kept at the district offices, but can still
be requested from the Office of
Compliance. Registration data also can
be searched and downloaded from
CDRH’s Web site at www.fda.gov/cdrh.
Device listing information submitted
on Form FDA 2892 may also be
requested as specified in current
§ 807.37(b). Listing information can also
be searched and downloaded from
CDRH’s Web site. The search and
download capabilities of the Web-based
database is the method of obtaining
registration and listing data that is most
often used by the public.
III. Highlights of the Proposed Changes
to the Current Registration and Listing
Requirements
This proposal would modify the
current registration and listing
regulations to reflect FDAAA’s mandate
that device registration and listing be
submitted electronically and to facilitate
the government’s collection of
additional registration information as
mandated by the Bioterrorism Act. It
also would revise certain registration
and listing provisions to improve the
quality of registration and listing
information that will be available to
FDA for use in pursuing its important
health objectives.
Proposed Changes to the Current
Registration and Listing Regulations
We are proposing the following
changes to the current registration and
listing regulations:
1. Switch to an Electronic Registration
and Listing System
The current regulations in part 807
require owners and operators of device
establishments to submit their
registration and listing information to
FDA using paper forms (Forms FDA
2891, FDA 2891a, and FDA 2892). This
proposal would update the regulations
to conform to the requirement in section
510(p) of the FD&C Act, as amended by
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FDAAA, that such information be
provided to FDA electronically unless
FDA grants a request for a waiver.
As part of the new electronic
registration and listing system, each
owner or operator establish an account
using the FURLS, from which the owner
or operator creates and updates his or
her establishment registration and
device listing information. Information
submitted to FDA prior to September
15, 2007, has already been migrated to
the new electronic database and thus
there is no need for owners or operators
to reenter this information.
In accordance with section 510 of the
FD&C Act, as amended by sections 222
through 224 of FDAAA, device
establishment owners and operators
have been using FURLS to submit their
establishment registration and device
listing information electronically since
the system became operational on
October 1, 2007. In addition, in
accordance with section 510(p), as
amended by FDAAA section 224, FDA
is granting waivers from the new
electronic submission requirements
only to those owners or operators for
whom electronic registration and listing
is not reasonable.
2. Foreign Establishment Registration
and Listing Requirements of the
Bioterrorism Act
Before its devices will be allowed into
the United States, each foreign
establishment that is required to register
must supply to FDA the registration
information required by part 807,
including the name and contact
information for its U.S. agent. Section
321 of the Bioterrorism Act affected
foreign establishment registration in
part by amending section 510(i) of the
FD&C Act to require, as part of an
establishment’s registration, the name of
each importer of the device that is
known to the establishment and the
name of each person who imports or
offers to import the device into the
United States. This proposal would
amend part 807 to reflect in our
regulations the Bioterrorism Act
requirement that foreign establishments
whose devices are imported or offered
for import into the United States must
identify: (1) All importers known to the
foreign establishment and (2) the name
of each person who imports or offers to
import the foreign establishment’s
device into the United States. Proposed
changes to § 807.3 also would add
specific definitions for these two new
categories of information that need to be
submitted by foreign establishments.
On August 29, 2006, FDA issued a
proposed rule (71 FR 51276) relating to
drugs (including certain blood products)
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which proposed to revoke exemptions
from registration and listing
requirements found in §§ 207.40(a) and
607.40(a) (21 CFR 207.40(a) and
607.40(a)) relating to foreign
establishments whose drug products
enter a foreign trade zone and are then
re-exported from the foreign trade zone
without having entered U.S. commerce.
The same rule also proposed to revoke
exemptions in §§ 207.40(b) and
607.40(b) which allow a component of
a drug imported under section 801(d)(3)
of the FD&Act (or a blood product
imported under section 801(d)(4) of the
FD&C Act) to be imported or offered for
import into the United States even if the
component is not listed and
manufactured, prepared, propagated,
compounded, or processed at a
registered foreign establishment. (21
U.S.C. 381(d)(3) and (d)(4)).
Consistent with the revisions
proposed to §§ 207.40 and 607.40, and
for the reasons discussed in that rule
(see 71 FR 51283–51284 and 51324), we
are proposing to eliminate the
exemption in § 807.40(a) for foreign
establishments whose devices enter a
foreign trade zone and are re-exported
from the foreign trade zone without
entering U.S. commerce, and the
exemption in § 807.40(c) for devices that
are imported under section 801(d)(3) of
the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 381(d)(3)). We
believe that removing the exemptions
from registration and listing
requirements for devices entering
foreign trade zones and for products
imported under section 801(d)(3) of the
Act is consistent with Congress’ desire,
as reflected in the Bioterrorism Act, to
increase the Nation’s ability to prepare
for and effectively respond to
bioterrorism and other public health
emergencies by requiring foreign
establishments to provide more, rather
than less, information for imported
products.
3. Change in Requirements Relating to
Contract Manufacturers and Sterilizers
The proposed regulation would
amend current part 807 regarding the
applicability of registration and listing
requirements to contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers. Under the
proposed regulation, all contract
manufacturers and sterilizers would be
required to register their establishment
and list their devices. Currently
§ 807.20(a)(2) states that contract
manufacturers who do not put the
device into commercial distribution do
not have to list those devices. In
addition, § 807.20(c)(1) and (c)(2)
currently provide that contract
manufacturers and sterilizers who do
not put a device into commercial
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distribution do not have to register or
list. These two provisions, taken
together, have been interpreted as
requiring contract manufacturers and
sterilizers to register and list only if they
distribute the device commercially on
behalf of the person initiating the
specifications.
FDA relies on having a complete and
accurate registration of device
establishments and the devices
processed at those establishments in
order to accomplish a number of
important statutory and regulatory
objectives. FDA’s recent experience
with contract manufacturers and
contract sterilizers since October 1,
2007, suggests that many of these firms
that have voluntarily registered and
listed in the past, no longer do so. When
such establishments experience a
problem, it can have significant impact
on the product lines for the one or
multiple firms for which it is contracted
to provide manufacturing or
sterilization services. Knowing which
products are manufactured or sterilized
at the affected site could facilitate the
recall of the impacted devices. FDA also
believes that knowing that these
manufacturing sites exist would be
critical information when a device is in
short supply or needed in the event of
a national emergency.
We are proposing to modify
§ 807.20(a)(2) and delete § 807.20(c)(1)
and (c)(2) such that all contract
manufacturers and contract sterilizers
would be required to register their
establishments and list their devices
regardless of whether they put the
device in commercial distribution.
4. Requiring Submission of the FDA
Product Code Assigned to a Device
Rather Than the Classification Name
and Number
Current § 807.25(f)(1) indicates that
when listing their devices, registrants
need to provide, among other
information, the classification name and
number of each device. The new
electronic system would require exempt
devices to be identified by product code
rather than by classification name and
number. The product code is already
requested for such devices. This change
to the regulation, therefore, is intended
to codify the existing practice.
5. Requiring Submission of the 510(k) or
HDE Number for Non-Exempt Device
Listings
Current § 807.25(f)(3) requires owners
or operators to provide as part of their
device listing information the premarket
submission number assigned by FDA
under section 505 or 515 of the FD&C
Act (21 U.S.C. 360j) for approved
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devices. FDA also has been requesting
owners or operators to identify as part
of their device listing information the
assigned premarket notification number
for a device cleared under section 510(k)
of the FD&C Act (i.e., the 510(k)
number) or the assigned HDE number
for a device approved for marketing
under section 520(m) of the FD&C Act.
This proposal amends § 807.25(f)(3) (at
proposed § 807.25(g)(4)) to include
510(k) numbers and HDE numbers
among the types of premarket
submission numbers required to be
provided as part of the listing
information submitted to FDA for nonexempt devices.
Collection of the premarket
submission numbers allows FDA to
better protect the public health by
providing a mechanism FDA can use to
follow the total product life cycle of
non-exempt medical devices. Having
access to this information through the
listing process also facilitates the
agency’s use of information that was
collected during premarket review to
identify devices by attributes other than
the product code that is assigned to the
product. This would include
information such as whether the device
contains materials from animal sources,
is an implanted device, and other
information that generally is not
collected as part of the device listing.
Until FDA began collecting the 510(k)
number, it was difficult to determine
which products listed under registration
and listing requirements were being
marketed under a specific premarket
notification clearance. At times, the
product code assigned to a device
during the premarket notification
clearance process was not accurately
identified when the device was listed.
This meant that a device assigned one
product code during the 510(k) review
process could ultimately be listed with
FDA under a different product code
once the device was put in commercial
distribution.
This lack of a direct link between
products on the market and their
premarket filings made it difficult for
FDA to know which devices that we had
cleared were being marketed, and where
the devices were being marketed. This
change would allow us to better
identify, evaluate, and resolve potential
problems with marketed devices when
public health concerns arise.
Proposed § 807.25(g)(4) would codify
the practice of including the 510(k)
number when listing a medical device
that has gone through premarket
clearance or the approved HDE number
in the electronic device registration and
listing system. This change also would
provide FDA with a tool to help ensure
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that devices that lack a required
premarket clearance or premarket
approval are not marketed.
6. Identification of a Contact Person to
Administer the Electronic System
Accounts
Prior to the implementation of
FURLS, each owner or operator
identified an official correspondent on
Forms FDA 2891 and FDA 2891a. The
official correspondent was the only
person who could supply, delete or
change information related to a device
establishment and its listings. As a
result of the passage of FDAAA, FDA
began collecting device registration and
listing information using FURLS
beginning in October 2007. When using
FURLS, an owner or operator needs to
identify not only an official
correspondent for the establishment but
also a contact person for the owner or
operator. The contact person is the only
person who can administer the owner or
operator’s user accounts in FURLS.
In instances where owners or
operators have only one establishment,
they may choose the same person to
serve as both the contact person for the
user account and the official
correspondent for the establishment. For
owners or operators with multiple
establishments, the contact person for
the owner or operator may also serve as
the official correspondent for any or all
of the owner or operator’s
establishments. Alternatively, using the
accounts management software for
FURLS, the owner or operator may
create subaccounts in which different
official correspondents are identified for
each establishment.
Proper control of access to accounts
and control of the ability to update an
establishment’s online information is
necessary to avoid errors. Therefore, we
are proposing that each owner or
operator identify only one contact
person within the owner or operator’s
organization who will be responsible for
creating the master account in FURLS
for the owner or operator and assigning
subaccounts to each establishment, if
needed. Once the contact person creates
the master account and any needed
subaccounts, the official correspondent
can then use the accounts to submit the
owner or operator’s establishment
registration and device listing
information to FDA.
7. Establishment Operations Will Be
Reported Through Device Listing
Currently, owners or operators are
required to identify the operations or
activities that they conduct at their
establishments as part of the registration
information required on Forms FDA
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14515
2891 and FDA 2891a and also as part of
the listing information required on Form
FDA 2892. Under the proposed rule, we
would require owners or operators to
identify the operations or activities their
establishments engage in only as part of
their device listings. This is because the
new electronic system has been
designed to automatically migrate the
information provided in the device
listing to the owner or operator’s
registration, thus saving the owner or
operator from having to provide the
same information twice. Because under
the new system owners or operators
would only have to supply such
information once, this change will save
time and help avoid inconsistencies
between the registration and listing
information for a single establishment.
8. Registration Fees
FDAAA section 212 requires that
certain medical device establishments
pay a registration user fee when they
initially register with us and for each
annual registration thereafter. Therefore,
we are deleting the sentence at the
beginning of § 807.20(b) that states, ‘‘No
registration or listing fee is required.’’
9. Definition of Restricted Devices
This proposal also would revise the
definition of ‘‘restricted device’’ in
§ 807.3(i) to more accurately reflect the
provisions of the FD&C Act that provide
us with authority to restrict devices.
IV. Description of the Proposed Rule
We are proposing to amend our
establishment registration and device
listing regulations in part 807 in order
to implement changes that are required
by FDAAA, section 321 of the
Bioterrorism Act, and section 207 of
MDUFMA.
As a result, in this proposal we have
revised and re-codified some provisions,
added new provisions, and eliminated
others. The following discussion of the
proposed rule describes the new
provisions we would add to part 807
and also the changes we would make to
the existing provisions.
A. General
1. What Is the Purpose of the Proposed
Changes to Part 807?
Changes we are proposing to the
current registration and listing
requirements are intended to:
• Improve the accuracy and
availability of postmarket medical
device information;
• Make submission of the information
required by the registration and listing
provisions of part 807 easier and faster;
• Comply with the Bioterrorism Act
and MDUFMA by implementing an
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electronic registration and listing
system;
• Comply with the additional
information collection requirements of
the Bioterrorism Act;
• Eliminate ambiguity and clarify
requirements in the current device
registration and listing regulations; and
• Link postmarket listing data
collection with related premarket data
by collecting premarket review numbers
assigned by FDA.
2. Who Would Be Affected by the
Proposed Changes to Part 807?
The proposed changes to part 807
would impact all device establishments
that are required to register their
establishments and list their devices
with FDA; however, the revised
regulation would have the greatest
impact on contract manufacturers,
contract sterilizers, and foreign
establishments.
a. Contract manufacturers and
sterilizers. The proposed rule would
require that all contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers register their
establishments and list their devices.
Currently, there are two provisions,
§ 807.20(a)(2) and (c), that address the
registration and listing requirements for
contract manufacturers and contract
sterilizers. Current § 807.20(a)(2) states:
‘‘* * * person who only manufactures
devices according to another person’s
specifications, for commercial
distribution by the person initiating
specifications, is not required to list
those devices.’’ Current § 807.20(c)
states: ‘‘Registration and listing
requirements shall not pertain to any
person who: (1) Manufacturers devices
for another party who both initiated the
specifications and commercially
distributes the device; (2) sterilizes
devices on a contract basis for other
registered facilities who commercially
distribute the devices. * * *’’
These two provisions, taken together
have been interpreted to require
registration and listing by contract
manufacturers or contract sterilizers
only when they are the party placing the
device into commercial distribution. We
are proposing to delete current
§ 807.20(c)(1) and (c)(2) and, in
addition, would revise § 807.20(a)(2) in
a manner consistent with section
737(13)(A) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
379i(13)(A)), a provision added by
FDAAA that addresses which types of
establishments are subject to device
registration user fees. These changes to
§ 807.20(a) and (c) will have the effect
of requiring all contract manufacturers
and sterilizers to register and list
regardless of whether they commercially
distribute the devices. The agency
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believes this approach to registration
and listing for these devices and
combination products best enables
effective oversight by appropriate
agency components. Having all contract
manufacturers and sterilizers register
and list would provide us with basic
information about the entities that make
and clean devices. This information
would allow us to respond in a more
timely and effective fashion in the case
of an adverse event, shortage, or other
problem associated with one of these
establishments. The information would
also assist us in our fundamental
regulatory activities, such as planning
and scheduling inspections.
We recognize that with regard to
combination products, this approach to
registration and listing may result in
registration of the same facility and
listing of the same product with more
than one agency component. However,
we also note the agency is currently
working to develop harmonized
electronic registration and listing
systems within FDA. We anticipate that
once these harmonized systems are in
place, the agency will be able
implement a more streamlined approach
to facility registration and product
listing for combination products.
(b) Foreign establishments engaged in
the manufacture, preparation,
propagation, compounding, or
processing of a device that is imported
or offered for import into the United
States are currently required to register
and to submit listing information in
accordance with section 510 of the
FD&C Act and § 807.40 of our
regulations. These foreign
establishments are also required to
designate a U.S. agent, and to provide
contact information for that person to
FDA.
The revised regulation will codify
requirements established by section 222
of FDAAA, which changed the
timeframes in section 510(i) of the FD&C
Act for annual registration by foreign
device establishments to a specific 3month period each year beginning on
October 1 and ending on December 31.
It also would codify in part 807 certain
requirements established by section 321
of the Bioterrorism Act. The
Bioterrorism Act amended section 510(i)
of the FD&C Act to require those foreign
establishments that have to register with
FDA to do so by electronic means, and
to include additional pieces of
information as part of their registration.
The additional information required by
section 510(i) includes the name of each
‘‘importer of such * * * device in the
United States that is known to the
establishment,’’ and the name of each
‘‘person who imports or offers for import
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such * * * device to the United States
for purposes of importation.’’ As
discussed at section IV.A.4 of this
document, this proposal also would
incorporate, at § 807.3, definitions
clarifying these two new categories of
information that need to be submitted
by foreign establishments.
Most of the provisions in section 321
of the Bioterrorism Act became effective
on December 8, 2002, but the effective
date of the electronic registration
requirement was later delayed by
MDUFMA section 207 (which added
section 510(p) of the FD&C Act) so that
FDA would have an opportunity to put
systems in place to accommodate the
electronic receipt of registration
information. The agency has now
developed a system, FURLS, which
became operational on October 1, 2007,
that makes the electronic receipt of
device establishment registration and
device listing information feasible.
3. Who Would Be Exempt From
Registration and Listing?
We propose no changes to the
categories of persons or establishments
that are exempt from registration
requirements under § 807.65. As
discussed in section IV.A.2.a. of this
document, however, we are proposing
to eliminate the exemption from listing
requirements for contract manufacturers
under § 807.20(a), and the exemption
from registration and listing
requirements for contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers under
§ 807.20(c)(1) and (c)(2). As a result, all
contract manufacturers and sterilizers
would need to register and list
regardless of whether they put the
devices into commercial distribution.
For the same reasons as stated in the
proposed revisions to part 207 of FDA’s
regulations addressing drug
establishment registration and listing,
which were published in the Federal
Register of August 29, 2006 (71 FR
51276), we are proposing to revoke
exemptions in current § 807.40(a)
relating to foreign establishments whose
devices enter a foreign trade zone and
are re-exported from that foreign trade
zone without having entered U.S.
commerce, and in § 807.40(c) regarding
devices that are imported into the
United States under section 801(d)(3) of
the FD&C Act for further processing and
then exported without having been
placed on the U.S. market. We propose
eliminating these two exemptions
because of certain statutory changes that
have occurred since the publication of
the final rule on foreign establishment
registration and listing. Those changes
include enactment of the Bioterrorism
Act, which reflects Congress’ desire to
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increase the nation’s ability to prepare
for and respond effectively to
bioterrorism and other public health
emergencies and Congressional findings
that greater controls over imported
products be part of that effort.
4. What Definitions and Interpretations
of Terms Would Apply to Part 807?
In proposed § 807.3, we set forth new
definitions and interpretations of terms
as follows:
a. We are proposing to add a
definition for the term Product Code at
§ 807.3(k) to help describe the
identifying information that would have
to be submitted when listing a medical
device that is exempt from premarket
notification requirements. Currently, the
product code is a three-letter code used
by FDA to identify the generic category
of a device. Section 807.25(f)(1) of our
regulations currently states that the
owner or operator must identify the
classification name and number when
providing device listing information. In
practice, however, CDRH instead has
requested and accepted the three-letter
product code which can be identified
from the Web-based medical device
classification database at https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/
cfdocs/cfPCD/classification.cfm.
b. Proposed § 807.3(v) includes a
definition for FURLS, which as stated
previously, stands for FDA Unified
Registration and Listing System. FURLS
is the Internet-based electronic system
that owners and operators of device
establishments must use to submit
device registration and listing
information to FDA.
c. As described more fully in section
IV.B.3 of this document, this proposal
would help to implement the
requirement in section 510(i) of the
FD&C Act, as amended by the
Bioterrorism Act, that a foreign
establishment engaged in the
manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, or processing of a device
that is imported or offered for import
into the United States provide as part of
its registration with FDA identifying
information for each importer of such
device that is known to the
establishment. In proposed § 807.3(x),
we are proposing to define the term
‘‘importer’’ to mean a company or
individual in the United States that is
an owner, consignee, or recipient of the
foreign establishment’s device that is
imported into the United States. We
recognize that a foreign establishment
may have more than one ‘‘importer’’ and
we are proposing to include in this term
any owner, consignee, or recipient, even
if not the initial owner, consignee, or
recipient, of the foreign establishment’s
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device that is imported into the United
States. Under this proposal, the term
‘‘importer’’ would not include the
consumer or patient who ultimately
purchases, receives, or is the end user
of the device, unless the foreign
establishment ships the device directly
to the consumer or patient. We invite
comments on our definition of importer,
including the scope of the entities
included in the definition.
d. Section 510(i) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by the Bioterrorism Act, also
requires that foreign establishments who
are required to register with FDA
identify as part of their registration
information each ‘‘person who imports
or offers for import’’ the establishments’
devices to the United States. This
requirement, which would be
implemented at proposed § 807.41, is
discussed further in section IV.B.3 of
this document. In addition, we are
proposing a separate definition for the
term ‘‘person who imports or offers for
import’’ at § 807.3(y). As defined, this
term would include an agent, broker, or
other entity, that the foreign
establishment uses to facilitate the
importation of its device into the United
States. However, consistent with the
legislative history of the Bioterrorism
Act, the term ‘‘person who imports or
offers for import’’ would not include
carriers. We invite comments on our
proposed definition of the term ‘‘person
who imports or offers for import.’’
B. Registration
1. Who Would Be Required To Register?
Section 510(b) of the FD&C Act states
that registration requirements apply to
owners and operators of establishments
engaged in the ‘‘manufacture,
preparation, propagation, compounding,
or processing of medical devices.’’
Section 510(a)(1) of the FD&C Act
defines these terms to include
‘‘repackaging or otherwise changing the
container, wrapper or labeling of any
device package in furtherance of the
distribution of the device * * *’’.
The revisions we are proposing would
not change the classes of persons
required to register, except to specify
that all contract manufacturers and
sterilizers must register their
establishments, regardless of whether
they put the device in commercial
distribution or instead return it to the
specification developer or point of
origin.
2. When Would Initial Registration
Information Need to Be Provided?
Section 807.21, the provision
specifying timeframes for establishment
registration, is being renumbered in this
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proposal to § 807.22. Proposed § 807.22
would retain the requirement that
owners or operators must register each
establishment no later than 30 calendar
days after entering into an activity that
triggers registration requirements under
part 807.
Under current § 807.40(c), with
certain limited exceptions, a foreign
owner or operator must register an
establishment before a device
manufactured at the establishment may
be imported or offered for import into
the United States. This proposal would
not change the timeframe for initial
registration by a foreign establishment.
3. What Information Would Be Required
for Registration?
Under proposed § 807.25, all owners
or operators would need to provide the
following information in order to
register their establishments:
a. Name of the owner or operator of
each establishment. Section 807.3(f)
defines the owner or operator as the
corporation, subsidiary, affiliated
company, partnership, or proprietor
directly responsible for the activities of
the registering establishment. While the
requirement to identify the owner or
operator of the establishment is not
new, we are addressing it here to
provide assistance in identifying the
owner or operator for medical device
registration and listing purposes.
In practice, the owner or operator
usually is the entity that has final
responsibility over the device
establishment, such as the
establishment’s parent company or
corporate headquarters. For most small
device manufacturers who conduct their
business activities at the same site as
their regulated device activities, this
typically is the same name and address
as that of the registered establishment
itself. In other words, for a business that
has only one location where all medical
device production activities are
conducted and where corporate
responsibility for those activities
resides, the owner or operator name and
address information is the same as the
establishment information.
This has often been a source of
confusion regarding the information that
must be submitted for registration and
listing. We invite comments and
questions about what constitutes the
‘‘owner or operator’’ of a device
establishment for purposes of part 807.
b. Name, trade name(s), and address
of each establishment (proposed
§ 807.25(b)). This provision is consistent
with section 510(c) of the FD&C Act,
which requires owners and operators to
register the names and place of business
of the establishment. There are no
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changes being proposed to this
requirement in the revised regulation.
c. Registration number of each
establishment. Section 510(e) of the
FD&C Act authorizes us to assign a
registration number to any person or
establishment who registers. Under
§ 807.35(a) of our regulations, we
currently assign a permanent
registration number to each device
establishment when that establishment
registers for the first time. The proposed
regulation would only change the
method of delivery of the FDA
registration number to the owner or
operator. FDA registration numbers are
communicated to the registrant by email
after we receive the registration
information through the electronic
device registration and listing system
and it has been verified by the
appropriate FDA district office. As there
is no physical document to validate and
return, FDA no longer sends a validated
copy of a form back to the registrant by
postal mail.
d. Name, address, telephone and fax
numbers, and e-mail address of the
official correspondent for each
establishment (proposed § 807.25(e)). In
this document, we continue to require
information regarding the official
correspondent of the establishment
because we need a contact person to be
responsible for submitting and keeping
the establishment’s registration and
device listing information current, and
to facilitate contact between FDA and
the owner or operator. Under proposed
§ 807.25(e), this information must be
kept current and any change in this
information must be provided to us
within 30 calendar days.
e. Information for foreign
establishments only. With respect to
foreign establishments who are required
to register their establishment with
FDA, we would require under proposed
§§ 807.40 and 807.41, that such
establishments submit the name,
address, telephone and fax numbers,
and e-mail address for the following:
• The U.S. agent;
• Each importer of the
establishment’s device in the United
States that is known to the
establishment; and
• Each person who imports or offers
for import the establishment’s device to
the United States.
The name, address, and phone
number of the United States agent is
information that already must be
submitted under current § 807.40(c). We
are proposing that owners or operators
also be required to provide information
regarding importers and persons who
import or offer for import the foreign
establishment’s device because of
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changes made to section 510(i) of the
FD&C Act by section 321 of the
Bioterrorism Act. Section 510(i), as
amended, requires foreign
establishments to submit as part of their
annual registration, among other things,
the name of each ‘‘importer’’ of their
device that is known to the foreign
establishment and also the name of each
‘‘person who imports or offers for
import’’ the foreign establishment’s
device to the United States. We,
therefore, expect the person responsible
for providing the registration and listing
information on behalf of the foreign
establishment to undertake appropriate
due diligence in gathering and entering
the information, which would include
identifying and reporting those
importers that others in his or her
establishment know of or have reason to
know of. In addition to identifying them
by name, the proposal would require
that the foreign establishment provide
the address, telephone and fax numbers,
and e-mail address of each importer and
each person who imports or offers for
import to enable us to contact these
persons.
We expect that some of the foreign
establishments’ ‘‘importers’’ will be
parties who also are considered ‘‘initial
importers’’ as that term is defined in our
current registration and listing
regulations at § 807.3(g). Under
§ 807.3(g), the term initial importer
means any importer who furthers the
marketing of a device from a foreign
manufacturer to the person who makes
the final delivery or sale of the device
to the ultimate consumer or user, but
does not repackage, or otherwise change
the wrapper or labeling of the device of
device package. Because initial
importers are already required to
register, the electronic registration and
listing system will permit foreign
establishments to use a search
mechanism built into the system to
identify those importers of the foreign
establishment’s devices that are also
initial importers. Foreign establishments
providing information for other types of
importers such as retail establishments
and end users who are not ordinarily
required to register with FDA would
have to provide the name, address and
contact information for each such
importer, except they would not need to
identify an end user that is either a
consumer or patient, unless the foreign
establishment ships its product directly
to the consumer or patient.
Because foreign establishments may
use different importers and persons who
import or offer for import for different
devices, in order to collect this
information efficiently, the agency
proposes to have foreign establishments
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provide this information when they are
listing their devices. The electronic
system will provide an interface for the
foreign establishment to identify each
product’s importers and persons who
import or offer for import on a listingby-listing basis.
The foreign establishment would not
be considered registered until all
information required under proposed
§§ 807.25, 807.40 and 807.41 is
submitted. Foreign establishment
registration data collected through the
electronic registration and listing system
will allow us to accurately identify who
is making devices, where they are being
made, and where they are going within
the United States. Having this
information is critically important to the
nation’s ability to prepare for and
effectively respond to public health
emergencies, including bioterrorism
threats and other public health
emergencies.
4. What Are the Proposed
Requirements for Reviewing and
Updating Registration Information?
This proposal would modify and
streamline the requirements associated
with updating registration information.
Currently, the regulations require that
owners or operators submit changes to
their establishment registration
information on Form FDA 2891a at the
time of annual registration, or by letter
if the changes occur at other times.
Under proposed § 807.22,
establishments would access FURLS
and review their current registration
information online, making changes
only where needed. Updating
registration information is less time
consuming using FURLS because the
establishment’s current information is
easily accessible at all times and only
changes to the information already in
the system need to be entered into the
applicable fields. Previously, the
registration and listing forms required
that most or all of an establishment’s
registration and/or device listing
information be re-entered on each paper
form submitted to FDA.
Some of the specific requirements
proposed for updating registration
information include the following:
a. Updates of registration information.
Owners or operators, under proposed
§ 807.25, would report the following
changes no later than 30 calendar days
after the change occurs:
• The closing or sale of an
establishment;
• Any change in the name or address
of an establishment;
• Any change in the name or address
of the owner or operator; and
• Any change in the name, address,
telephone and fax numbers, or e-mail
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address of the official correspondent or
the U.S. agent.
We encourage establishments to
provide expedited updates as soon as
possible after the change occurs, which
the new electronic device registration
and listing system will facilitate, but no
later than 30 calendar days after the
change occurs.
b. Annual review and update of
registration information. Proposed
§ 807.22 would require that registration
information be reviewed and updated
annually, during the period beginning
on October 1 and ending on December
31, which represents the first 3 months
of FDA’s fiscal year. This timeframe is
consistent with the requirements in
section 510(b) and (i) of the FD&C Act
as amended by section 222 of FDAAA.
Current § 807.21 provides a schedule for
the annual registration of establishments
during one of four periods of the
calendar year (i.e., March, June, August,
and November) based on the first letter
of the owner or operator’s name.
Proposed § 807.22 would replace this
schedule with the requirement that all
owners or operators renew their
registration information annually,
during the period beginning on October
1 and ending on December 31 of the
fiscal year for which they are
registering.
All registration information would
need to be reviewed and updated each
year using FURLS, even when no
changes have occurred during the
previous year. The phrase ‘‘review and
update’’ as used in proposed § 807.22(b)
stresses the importance of first
reviewing all registration information to
determine if any changes have occurred,
and then updating the information
where needed, or confirming the
accuracy of the current information.
Under proposed § 807.22, updates must
reflect all changes that have occurred
since the last update.
When an owner or operator fails to
comply with the annual registration or
listing requirements, the establishment
converts to a ‘‘failed to register’’ or
‘‘failed to list’’ status as applicable. This
would include registrants who have not
been granted a waiver from electronic
registration who attempt to re-register
their establishment by submitting a
paper-based form or letter. These
establishments would retain their failed
to register and/or list status until the
owner or operator uses the electronic
system to review, update, and certify the
accuracy of their registration and listing
information.
We believe that placing
establishments whose owners or
operators fail to comply with
registration or listing requirements in
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one or both of these categories, as
applicable, is reasonable given the
importance of registration and listing
information. To increase the nation’s
ability to prepare for and respond
effectively to public health emergencies,
including bioterrorism threats and other
public health emergencies, it is
becoming increasingly important for
owners and operators of device
establishments to comply with our
registration and listing requirements.
With accurate registration and listing
information, FDA can more quickly
identify where particular types of
devices, e.g., respirators or blood tubing,
are being made and help ensure that
they are available as promptly as
possible for a public health emergency.
Furthermore, taking steps to increase
compliance with these requirements is
consistent with section 301(p) of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 331(p)), which
makes it a prohibited act to fail to
register or list in accordance with
section 510 of the FD&C Act.
c. Type of operation. We are
proposing to have owners or operators
enter information about the types of
operations or activities conducted at
each of their establishments only when
they are entering listing information.
Before the implementation of FURLS,
changing the types of operations or
activities required updates to both
registration and listing data. This has in
some instances led to discrepancies
between the types of activities being
reported on an establishment’s
registration forms as compared to the
activities being reported on their device
listing forms.
FURLS automatically keeps an
establishment’s registration record
current and consistent with its listing
information by assigning or removing
activities to and from the registration
record based on the current active
listing information for each device. This
practice will help to avoid confusion
and conflicts between registration and
listing information for a single
establishment.
d. How the information would be
submitted. Proposed § 807.21 would
require establishments to submit
information to us electronically, unless
we grant a waiver under proposed
§ 807.21(b).
e. Transfer of device establishment
ownership. Under this proposal,
information regarding changes to
ownership of device establishments
would also be submitted using the
electronic device registration and listing
system. There would be a selection from
the main menu that will appear for the
device registration and listing system
when accessed through FURLS that will
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14519
prompt the user through the process of
submitting all information required to
report the transfer of ownership.
C. Listing
1. Who Would Be Required to List
Devices?
The changes we are proposing would
not change the classes of persons that
are required to list devices, except to
alter the listing obligations of those
contract manufacturers and sterilizers
who are currently exempt from listing
under § 807.20(a)(2), (c)(1), and (c)(2)
because the establishments for whom
they make or sterilize devices on a
contract basis are the ones who
commercially distribute the devices. As
stated elsewhere in this document, we
are proposing to eliminate this
exemption, which will have the effect of
requiring all contract manufacturers and
contract sterilizers to register and list
regardless of who has responsibility for
placing the devices into commercial
distribution.
Under this proposal, all parties who
are required to register would continue
to be required to also provide device
listings to FDA, with the exception of
initial importers. Initial importers
currently are not required to submit a
device listing for those devices for
which the initial importer did not
initiate or develop the specifications, or
repackage or relabel the device. We are
not proposing to change this practice.
2. When Would Listing Information Be
Provided?
Under proposed § 807.22(a), at the
time an establishment is initially
registered, owners and operators would
list any device that the establishment
manufactures or otherwise puts in
commercial distribution. This provision
is consistent with section 510(j)(1) of the
FD&C Act, which requires, among other
things, that every person who registers
with the Secretary under section 510(b),
(c), (d), or (i) of the FD&C Act must, at
that time, provide the Secretary with a
list of the devices being manufactured,
prepared, propagated, compounded, or
processed by that person for commercial
distribution.
Proposed § 807.22(a) and (b) also
address providing listing information
for devices not previously listed and
reviewing and updating information for
devices that have already been listed.
Previously, owners or operators were
required to review and update listing
information each June and December
and submit all material changes to the
device listing information that had been
previously submitted.
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Although registrants may choose to
amend their device listing information
at any time throughout the year, under
proposed § 807.22(a) and (b), owners
and operators would be required to
review and update their listing
information only once per year, during
the annual registration period beginning
on October 1 and ending on December
31 of each year. In addition, foreign
establishments would continue to be
required to submit device listings before
their devices may be imported or offered
for import into the United States.
3. What Listing Information Would Be
Required?
The following discussion summarizes
the new information that would be
required under proposed §§ 807.25,
807.26, and 807.28:
a. The assigned FDA premarket
submission number of the approved
application or cleared premarket
notification for each device listed that is
subject to sections 505, 510, 515, or 520
of the FD&C Act, which includes devices
that are not exempt from premarket
notification and approval. In the case of
non-exempt products, owners or
operators would be required to identify
a product’s premarket submission
number, that is, the number FDA
assigned to the 510(k), premarket
approval (PMA) application, product
development protocol (PDP),
humanitarian device exemption (HDE),
or new drug application (NDA). Unlike
the previous system, which assigned
one listing per product code, under the
new electronic system (FURLS) each
device with a premarket submission
number now constitutes a separate
listing and is assigned a unique listing
number. In FURLS, when the premarket
submission number is entered, the
product codes that were assigned to the
premarket submission based on the FDA
premarket review are automatically
displayed. This new system helps
establishments ensure that the listed
product codes match those that appear
on the substantial equivalence
notification or on the premarket
approval letter.
This change, which would be codified
in § 807.25(g)(4), generates more unique
listing numbers than the previous
system, because individual listings are
generated for each product subject to a
510(k), PMA, PDP, HDE, or NDA.
b. Additional types of information
required to be provided by foreign
establishments. With respect to foreign
establishments only, for devices
manufactured, prepared, propagated,
compounded, or processed at the
establishment, the establishment must
identify and provide contact
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information for: (1) The U.S. agent, (2)
each importer of the foreign
establishment’s device in the United
States that is known to the
establishment (‘‘importers’’), and (3)
each person who imports or offers for
import such device to the United States.
The requirement for foreign
establishments to designate a U.S. agent
is already included in the current
regulations at § 807.40(b) and this
requirement would not change.
However, the information regarding
importers and persons who import or
offer for import currently is not required
to be submitted under part 807. Because
section 321 of the Bioterrorism Act
requires the submission of information
about importers and persons who
import or offer for import, we are
proposing to amend our regulations to
conform to the statutory requirements.
In order to make it easier for foreign
establishments to provide information
about importers and persons who
import or offer for import when they are
registering and listing with FDA, FURLS
includes an interface that allows the
foreign establishments to select their
importers from the FDA database of
registered initial importers, and to enter
the names, addresses, and other contact
information for any additional importers
and persons who import or offer for
import (e.g., agents, brokers) who have
not previously been entered into the
electronic database.
Several of the listing requirements in
current §§ 807.25, 807.26, and 807.28
have changed only insofar as how the
information would be submitted using
FURLS. These requirements include the
following:
c. The current registration number
and name of each establishment under
the ownership and control of the owner
or operator that performs a regulated
function to a device. Proposed
§ 807.25(g)(1) requires that the owner or
operator provide FDA with the
registration number(s) for all
establishments under his or her
ownership or control that perform a
regulated function on, to, or for a
device. This means the owner or
operator does not need to inform FDA
of any activity regarding the device that
is performed at an establishment that is
not under the owner or operator’s
ownership or control. For example, an
owner or operator that develops
specifications at one establishment that
is under its ownership and control, and
then manufacturers the device at
another establishment that is also under
its ownership and control, must inform
FDA about both establishments when
listing the device. However, an owner or
operator that develops specifications for
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a device that is then manufactured by
another owner or operator’s
establishment, i.e., an establishment
which is not under its ownership and
control, must only identify the
establishment where the specifications
were developed, when submitting
listing information. In this case, the
owner or operator would not need to
identify the manufacturing
establishment.
This requirement, while not new, has
in the past been the source of some
confusion. To avoid further confusion,
FURLS has been designed such that an
owner or operator can only submit
listing information for establishments
under its ownership or control. Under
FURLS, the owner or operator selects
their establishment(s) from a pick list
that only includes establishments under
the owner or operator’s control.
d. The product code for all listed
devices that are exempt from premarket
notification and approval, as well as
devices put into commercial distribution
prior to May 28, 1976. Under this
proposal, owners or operators listing
devices that are considered exempt from
premarket notification, ‘‘preamendment’’ devices, (i.e., devices put
into commercial distribution prior to
May 28, 1976), or devices intended for
export only, would continue to identify
an applicable product code for the
device at the time of listing. When
submitting listing information using
Form FDA 2892, the owner or operator
had to make the determination of which
products could be listed under their
product code and did not require an
FDA premarket submission number.
However, the new electronic system
automatically displays only the product
codes for which an owner or operator
can create an exempt or export-only
listing during the listing process,
thereby eliminating the possibility of
the owner or operator selecting a
product code that requires a premarket
submission.
e. The proprietary or brand name(s)
under which the device is marketed.
FURLS accommodates entry of as many
proprietary or brand names as are
needed for all listings. This is a change
from the paper-based system which
limited the number of characters
available for entry of the proprietary or
brand names. The design of the FURLS
database and Web interface allows entry
of as many proprietary or brand names
as may be associated with the listing.
f. Each activity or process that is
conducted on, or done to, the device by
the listing owner or operator at each
establishment shown on the listing, such
as manufacturing, manufacturing for
export only, repacking, relabeling,
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developing specifications,
remanufacturing, SUD reprocessing,
contract manufacturing, or contract
sterilizing. We are proposing that
information about the activities or
processes that are performed with
respect to a device at each registered
establishment such as manufacturing,
manufacturing for export only,
repacking, relabeling, developing
specifications, remanufacturing, singleuse device reprocessing, contract
manufacturing, or contract sterilizing,
be identified as a part of the listing
process only. Previously, we required
such information to be submitted on the
establishment registration form (under
‘‘Establishment Types’’) and on the
device listing form. Consequently, at
times there were inconsistencies
between the two forms, which led to
confusion about the activities actually
being conducted at a particular device
establishment at any given time,
especially as companies added new
products or discontinued previouslylisted products. By limiting the
submission of this information to the
listing process, the information
available to FDA should become more
consistent and accurate because FURLS
is designed to automatically conform
the establishment registration record to
reflect any changes made to the device
listing information, including any
changes in the types of activities or
processes performed at the
establishment. For example, if an owner
or operator lists a product under
product code ABC as being
manufactured at Establishment 1, and
lists another product under product
code DEF as being repacked or relabeled
at Establishment 1, then Establishment
1’s registration would automatically
include manufacturing and repacking/
relabeling as activities at the
establishment. If the owner or operator
were to amend its listing information to
reflect that it discontinued the product
under product code DEF, the
registration data for Establishment 1
would automatically be revised to show
Establishment 1 as a manufacturing site
only.
We expect this will be a more efficient
way to collect this information, and
should lessen the burden on the owner
or operator, who no longer would be
required to enter information about the
establishment’s operations during both
the registration and the listing
processes. The owner or operator would
no longer be responsible for ensuring
that the activities identified in their
registration record are consistent with
those in their listing records because
changes made to the activities included
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on their listing records would
automatically update the activities on
their registration record.
4. What Are the Proposed Requirements
for Reviewing and Updating Listing
Information?
Previously, establishments had to
enter new or revised listing information
on Form FDA 2892 and return the form
to FDA. Under this proposal, owners or
operators would instead be required to
access our electronic device registration
and listing system (FURLS), review their
current listing information online, and
make any changes as needed. Updating
listing information is less timeconsuming under the proposal because
owners or operators are able to access
their information at any time, and only
need to enter data in the fields where
there are changes to listing information.
It also eliminates the need to mail the
form to FDA, and eliminates the return
and re-mailing of listing forms when the
information initially provided on the
form was incorrect or incomplete. The
electronic system has automatic
validations and edits built in to help
ensure that all listing information is
complete and correct.
Under proposed § 807.22(b), during
the annual review and update of
registration information, establishments
would be required to provide original
listing information for any device that
has not been previously listed, as well
as updates to listings for devices that
have been previously listed.
Under proposed § 807.22(b)(3),
owners or operators would review and
update their listing information during
the period beginning on October 1 and
ending on December 31 of each year.
This is consistent with the timeframes
set forth in the amendments to section
510(j)(2) of the FD&C Act by section 223
of FDAAA.
D. Electronic Format
1. How Would Registration and Listing
Information Be Provided To FDA?
Under proposed § 807.21, all
registration and listing information
would be provided to FDA through use
of our electronic device registration and
listing system, FURLS, with the
exception of labeling and advertisement
information for a device (when
submission of this information is
appropriate), and information from
those owners and operators who are
granted a waiver from the requirement
to submit information electronically.
To register their establishment and
list their devices using FURLS, owners
or operators need to do the following:
• Create an account in the FURLS. If
owners or operators already have a
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14521
FURLS account as a food or drug
establishment, they would update their
existing FURLS account to include
access to the device registration and
listing system;
• Create subaccounts, as necessary,
for the official correspondent for each
establishment that is being registered;
• Follow the prompts and the help
text provided to enter their
establishment registration and device
listing information; and
• Certify that the information entered
is accurate and complete.
Electronic submission of registration
and listing information provides a
number of advantages over the paperbased submission process. For example:
• We receive more accurate
information than with paper
submissions. The information received
is more consistent and accurate because
FURLS includes validation and
automated edits to help provide
consistency among the data. This also
helps eliminate errors of transcription
made when we input paper-based data
into our old registration and listing
database;
• Both for industry and FDA,
electronic transmission of the
information is easier and more efficient
than the use of paper forms. For
example, users submitting information
receive onscreen, real-time feedback if
the information submitted is
incomplete, thereby reducing errors and
the time and cost of communicating
with FDA. Electronic transmission of
the information also significantly
reduces the time and cost associated
with processing paper forms and
communicating with industry about
errors found on those forms; and
• The registration and listing
information available for search and
retrieval, both for FDA and industry, is
more accurate and up-to-date. Updates
may be made to FURLS in real time as
opposed to the paper-based system
where submissions could take several
weeks to arrive at FDA from foreign
establishments, then require another
week to 10 days to be screened at our
mail facility, forwarded to our data
entry contractor, and entered in our
current database.
2. How Does the Electronic Device
Registration and Listing System Work?
Information that is required from
owners and operators is submitted to
our electronic device registration and
listing system (FURLS) over the
Internet. The system has a number of
features designed to improve the overall
accuracy and verifiability of submitted
information, and decrease the burden on
owners and operators to comply with
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FDA’s registration and listing
regulations. The system is consistent
with conventions found on other
government sites. Some key features of
the system are: (1) Our electronic device
registration and listing system (FURLS)
is accessible through our FDA Internet
site. To use the Web site, you need
access to the Internet using a browser.
You could arrange for Internet access
through one of many available Internet
Service Providers (ISPs).You need an email address so we can send you
confirmation of submissions and other
related information. This e-mail address
could be obtained through the ISP or
from other sources; (2) prior to
accepting registration and listing
information from this online system, we
authenticate the source (that is, the
owner or operator) providing the data.
We authenticate entry into the
electronic device registration and listing
system by establishing user accounts
based on current registration
information. We also contacted owners
or operators of currently registered
establishments to identify the single
contact person who is responsible for
creating and maintaining the owner or
operator’s account and creating and
maintaining any subaccounts that the
owner or operator may require for
additional official correspondents if
more than one establishment is owned
or operated by a single entity; and (3) to
register and list electronically and to
provide updates to your registration and
listing information you would go to our
Web site and follow the instructional
prompts. You sign onto the system by
entering the account number, user
name, and password obtained by
following the procedures on the FDA
Web site and e-mailed and paper-mailed
to all current owners or operators
describing our electronic device
registration and listing system. You are
prompted to provide general
information about the owner or operator
and then specific information about
each establishment and device as
described in the provisions of proposed
part 807. When all of the required
information has been provided, the
official correspondent is notified
electronically that FDA has received the
information.
3. Will FDA Provide Training on How
to Submit Registration and Listing
Information Electronically?
We provide detailed instructions on
our Web-sent e-mail and paper mailings
to registered establishments explaining
FURLS. These materials explain the
electronic process for providing
registration and listing information,
including step-by-step instructions on
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creating user accounts and entering the
information that is required under
proposed part 807.
4. What Language Would Be Used to
Provide Registration and Listing
Information?
All domestic firms already submit
registration to us in English and, in this
proposal, we would retain the current
requirement under § 807.40(c) that
foreign establishments also submit their
registration and listing information in
the English language. While the
requirement has not changed, it has
been renumbered as § 807.40(d) to
accommodate the revisions to part 807
as described in this document.
5. Could the Electronic Format
Requirements Be Waived?
Section 510(p) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by FDAAA section 224,
requires the electronic submission of
registration and listing information
unless we grant a request for a waiver
because the use of electronic means is
not reasonable for the person requesting
the waiver. Consistent with section
510(p), proposed § 807.21(b) would
permit establishments to request
waivers from the new electronic
submission requirements.
We do not anticipate many waiver
requests because the business expenses
associated with owning a personal
computer, obtaining an e-mail address,
and subscribing to Internet access are
low. During the first 3 months of
operation of the Web-based system, i.e,
October through December 2007, we
received fewer than 10 requests for
waivers from the requirement to submit
registration and listing data
electronically. As we received data
electronically for more than 16,000
establishments for that same period, the
waiver requests amount to less than
one-tenth of 1 percent of the total
number of establishments that have
responded.
Under proposed § 807.21(b), we may
grant a waiver request upon a showing
that use of the Internet to access our
Web-based registration and listing
system is not reasonable for the person
requesting the waiver. This is consistent
with the requirement described in
section 510(p) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by section 224 of FDAAA.
Under proposed § 807.21(b), the waiver
request must explain why use of the
Internet and our electronic registration
and listing system is not reasonable for
the requestor and must include a
telephone number and mailing address
where we can contact the person
making the request. This information is
necessary to contact the requestor and
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for FDA to determine whether a waiver
can be granted. It should be noted,
however, that waiver requests stating
that it is not possible for the owner or
operator to own a computer will
probably not be granted since there are
other ways to access the Internet. For
example, most public libraries have
computers with Internet access that can
be used, often free of charge, by
members of the public.
In those instances when we do grant
a request for a waiver, we plan to
provide information at that time
regarding how the requestor should
submit its registration and listing
information.
E. Miscellaneous
1. What Are the Proposed Requirements
for an Official Correspondent and a U.S.
Agent?
Under proposed § 807.25(e) owners or
operators that are subject to the
registration requirements in proposed
part 807 would continue to have to
designate an official correspondent for
each establishment. The official
correspondent would be responsible for:
• Entering and updating all
registration and listing information for
the establishment in the electronic
system or, if the owner or operator has
been granted a waiver from using the
electronic system, providing all
registration and listing information for
the establishment to FDA via postal
mail;
• Serving as the point of contact with
FDA on matters relating to the annual
registration of the establishment and all
updates of registration information;
• Serving as the point of contact with
FDA on matters relating to initial device
listings and device listing updates,
including discontinuances;
• Maintaining a current list of officers
and directors for submission to FDA
upon FDA’s request; and
• The receipt of pertinent
correspondence from FDA directed to
and involving the owner or operator
and/or any of the owner or operator’s
establishments. Under proposed
§ 807.25(e), we are also adding the
requirement that each owner or operator
provide FDA with the name of a contact
person at the owner or operator’s offices
who will be responsible for identifying
the official correspondent for each
establishment. The owner or operator
contact person will be the official
correspondent in the event no one else
has been properly designated. The
contact person would be responsible for
establishing and updating the owner or
operator’s electronic registration and
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listing accounts and all subaccounts that
may be necessary.
In addition, each foreign
establishment is required under our
existing regulations at § 807.40(b) to
designate a single U.S. agent. This
proposal retains that requirement. The
U.S. agent’s responsibilities include:
• Helping FDA communicate with the
foreign establishment;
• Responding to questions concerning
the foreign establishment’s devices; and
• Helping us schedule inspections.
We would not object if the same
individual serves as both the U.S. agent
and the official correspondent for a
foreign establishment, or if the same
individual serves as the U.S. agent for
more than one foreign establishment.
We are not proposing to change the
requirement that each foreign
establishment be limited to designating
only one U.S. agent. We interpret
section 510(i) of the FD&C Act as
allowing only one U.S. agent for each
foreign establishment because section
510(i) refers to the U.S. agent in
singular, rather than plural, terms. We
also interpret section 510(i) of the FD&C
Act as requiring that the U.S. agent must
be located in the United States. These
provisions are also consistent with the
use of ‘‘U.S. agent’’ in the agency’s
interim final rule entitled ‘‘Registration
of Food Facilities Under the Public
Health Security and Bioterrorism
Preparedness Act of 2002’’ (68 FR 58894
at 58915, October 10, 2003).
Currently, the provisions concerning a
U.S. agent are set forth in our
regulations at §§ 807.3(r) and 807.40(b).
Current § 807.3(r) defines U.S. agent as
a person residing or maintaining a place
of business in the United States whom
a foreign establishment designates as its
agent. The definition further states that
the term ‘‘United States agent’’ excludes
mailboxes, answering machines or
services, or other places where an
individual acting as the foreign
establishment’s agent is not physically
present. Section 807.40(b) also indicates
that the U.S. agent must reside or
maintain a place of business in the
United States, and adds that if FDA is
unable to contact the foreign
establishment directly or expeditiously,
FDA may provide information to the
U.S. agent and this action will be
considered as equivalent to giving the
same information to the foreign
establishment itself.
This proposal would retain the
requirements from the existing
regulations concerning the U.S. agent.
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2. What Legal Status Is Conferred by
Registration and Listing?
This proposal would retain provisions
in our existing regulations, at
§§ 807.35(c) and 807.39, addressing the
legal status of registrants and their
devices. These provisions indicate that
registration of an establishment or
listing of a device does not denote
approval of the establishment, the
device, or other devices of the
establishment; nor does it mean that a
product may be legally marketed. Any
representation that creates an
impression of official approval or that a
device is approved or is legally
marketable because of registration or
listing would be misleading and would
constitute misbranding under section
502 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 352).
3. Would the Proposal Require
Electronic Submission of Labeling and
Advertisements?
Current § 807.31(e) requires owners or
operators to submit labeling and in
certain cases advertisements or other
information for their device when they
are specifically requested to do so by
FDA. Currently such information, if
requested, would be provided to us in
paper format. This proposal would give
owners or operators from whom copies
of labeling or advertisements are
requested under § 807.31 (which we are
proposing to redesignate as § 807.26) the
option of submitting the information to
us either in paper format or
electronically. In those instances where
the owner or operator chooses to submit
the requested information
electronically, they would do so by
email rather than using FURLs. We
intend to indicate in public Docket No.
92S–0251 that we are prepared to accept
this information in electronic format.
4. What Registration and Listing
Information Would Be Made Available
for Public Disclosure?
Current § 807.37 pertains to the public
availability of registration and listing
information. The proposal would revoke
the introductory text of current
§ 807.37(a), which includes a
description of the types of forms
available for inspection, the addresses at
which such forms can be inspected, and
the addresses to which requests for
verification of registration numbers and
requests for locations of registered
establishments can be directed. We are
proposing to revoke this introductory
text because these forms are no longer
being used under FURLS. Instead, we
intend to continue the current practice
of making registration and listing
information that is available for public
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14523
disclosure accessible from our Web site.
We expect that the registration and
listing information available on the Web
under the new electronic system will
not change from that which is currently
available. This initiative is consistent
with the GPEA and also helps to reduce
the number of Freedom of Information
Act (5 U.S.C. 552) requests we receive
for registration and listing information.
5. How Would Part 11 Apply to the
Electronic Submission of Registration
and Listing Information?
Under part 807 as revised by this
proposal, the submission of registration
and listing information would be subject
to the requirements of part 11 (21 CFR
part 11), except for the requirements
under § 11.10(b), (c), and (e) and the
corresponding requirements under
§ 11.30.
In the Federal Register of March 20,
1997 (62 FR 13430), we published
regulations on electronic records and
electronic signatures (part 11). Part 11
regulations, among other things, set
forth the criteria under which records
submitted to us may be submitted in
electronic format in lieu of paper
records. Section 11.2(b) provides for the
submission of electronic records instead
of paper records provided the
requirements of Part 11 are met and the
documents or parts of documents to be
submitted have been identified by us in
public Docket No. 92S–0251 as being
the type of submission we are prepared
to accept in electronic format.
Part 11 permits the widest possible
use of electronic technology, compatible
with our responsibility to promote and
protect the public health (62 FR 13430).
Part 11 helps to ensure the authenticity,
integrity, and, when appropriate, the
confidentiality of electronic records.
Part 11 also helps to safeguard against
the possible repudiation of those
records. The controls in subpart B of
part 11 are intended to further this
purpose.
In the Federal Register of September
5, 2003 (68 FR 52779), we announced
the availability of a guidance for
industry entitled ‘‘Part 11, Electronic
Records; Electronic Signatures—Scope
and Application’’ (the part 11 guidance).
The part 11 guidance explains our
current thinking regarding the
requirements and application of part 11
and states that we intend to exercise
enforcement discretion in the manner
specified in the guidance with respect to
the validation (§ 11.10 (a)), audit trail
(§ 11.10(e) and (k)(2)), record retention
(§ 11.10(c)), and copies of records
(§ 11.10(b)) requirements of part 11, and
any corresponding requirements in
§ 11.30. In addition, we announced that
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we intend to exercise enforcement
discretion and do not intend to take (or
recommend) action to enforce any part
11 requirements with regard to systems
that were operational before August 20,
1997, the effective date of part 11
(commonly known as legacy systems)
under the circumstances described in
section III.C.3 of the part 11 guidance.
The part 11 requirements from which
we propose exemptions in this proposal
differ from the part 11 requirements for
which we intend to exercise
enforcement discretion, as described in
the part 11 guidance. They differ
because the proposed exemptions in
this rule are specific to the electronic
submission of registration and listing
information for devices that would be
covered under proposed part 807,
whereas the part 11 guidance applies to
the maintenance of all electronic
records and to all electronic
submissions subject to part 11.
With respect to the electronic
submission of registration and listing
information, as previously noted, we
believe, as provided in proposed
§ 807.25(a), that several of the
requirements in subpart B of part 11 are
not necessary to further the goals of part
11. Because we control the electronic
device registration and listing system
(FURLS), certain controls for systems
would not apply to the submission of
registration and listing information,
such as:
• The ability to generate accurate and
complete copies of records in both
human readable and electronic form
suitable for inspection, review, and
copying by the agency (§ 11.10(b));
• The protection of records to enable
their accurate and ready retrieval
throughout the records retention period
(§ 11.10(c));
• The use of secure, computergenerated, time-stamped audit trails to
independently record the date and time
of operator entries and actions that
create, modify, or delete electronic
records (§ 11.10(e)); and
• The corresponding controls of
§ 11.30.
You would be exempt from these
subpart B controls because FURLS is
designed to ensure the authenticity,
integrity, and confidentiality of this
information in several ways. For
example, we would control the
database, and you would only be able to
enter and/or revise information in your
own account. In addition, the database
would contain records of registration
and listing information, including the
history of all changes to those records,
and we could generate accurate and
complete copies of these records.
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With respect to the electronic
submission of labeling or
advertisements in connection with
device listing, we believe, as provided
in proposed § 807.26, that the following
requirements in subpart B of part 11 are
not necessary to further the goals of part
11:
• The validation of systems to ensure
accuracy, reliability, consistent
intended performance, and the ability to
discern invalid or altered records
(§ 11.10(a));
• The protection of records to enable
their accurate and ready retrieval
throughout the records retention period
(§ 11.10(c));
• Limiting system access to
authorized individuals (§ 11.10(d));
• The use of secure, computergenerated, time-stamped audit trails to
independently record the date and time
of operator entries and actions that
create, modify, or delete electronic
records (§ 11.10(e));
• The use of operational system
checks to enforce permitted sequencing
of steps and events, as appropriate
(§ 11.10(f));
• The use of authority checks to
ensure that only authorized individuals
can use the system, electronically sign
a record, access the operation or
computer system input or output
device, alter a record, or perform the
operation at hand (§ 11.10(g));
• The use of device checks to
determine, as appropriate, the validity
of the source of data input or
operational instruction (§ 11.10(h));
• The use of appropriate controls over
certain systems documentation
(§ 11.10(k)); and
• The corresponding controls of
§ 11.30.
We are proposing to exempt the
electronic submission of labeling and
advertisements from these controls for
systems because we believe these
requirements are not critical to ensure
the quality of the labeling and
advertisements that would be submitted
under this proposed rule and we do not
think it is necessary for industry to
expend resources on controls that are
not necessary to further the goals of part
11.
With regard to labeling and
advertising submissions in electronic
format, we recognize there are some
differences with respect to the
exemptions from part 11 requirements
provided in this proposed rule (that is,
§ 11.10(a), (c) through (h), and (k), and
the corresponding requirements of
§ 11.30), and the part 11 requirements
set forth in the part 11 guidance for
which we intend to exercise
enforcement discretion (that is,
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§ 11.10(a) through (c), (e), and (k)(2),
and the corresponding requirements in
§ 11.30). Although this proposal does
not provide an exemption from
§ 11.10(b) for the labeling and
advertisements, the part 11 guidance
announces that we intend to exercise
enforcement discretion with respect to
that section in the manner described in
the guidance.
If this proposed rule is finalized, we
intend to identify in public Docket No.
92S–0251 the registration and listing
information and the labeling and
advertising information specified
previously as types of records that we
are prepared to accept in electronic
format.
F. Conforming Actions
The proposed changes will not result
in changes to any regulations other than
part 807.
V. Legal Authority
We have the legal authority to amend
our regulations on foreign and domestic
establishment registration and listing for
human devices. The statutory basis for
our authority includes sections 201,
301, 501, 502, 510, 513, 515, 519–520,
701, 704, 801, and 903 of the FD&C Act
(21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 351, 352, 360c,
360e, 360i–360j, 371, 374, 381, and
393); and sections 361 and 368 of the
Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 264
and 271) (the PHS Act).
Section 510(c) of the FD&C Act
requires every person upon first
engaging in the manufacture,
preparation, propagation, compounding,
or processing of a device to immediately
register with the Secretary his name,
place of business, and the
establishment. The provisions in section
510(b) and (d) of the FD&C Act require
annual registration and registration of
additional establishments, respectively.
As amended by section 222 of FDAAA,
section 510(b) of the FD&C Act requires
that annual registration take place
during the period beginning on October
1 and ending on December 31 of each
year. Section 510(i) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by section 222 of FDAAA,
requires any establishment within any
foreign country engaged in the
manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, or processing of a device
that is imported or offered for import
into the United States, upon first
engaging in such activity, to
immediately register with the Secretary
through electronic means, and thereafter
to register annually during the period
beginning on October 1 and ending on
December 31 of each year. These
provisions, together with section 701(a)
(among others) of the FD&C Act,
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authorize us to require the submission
of the registration information specified
in the proposal. The information
specified in this proposal would help us
identify who is manufacturing,
repacking, or relabeling devices and
where those operations are being
performed. In addition, some
information (e.g., official correspondent
information) would help us
communicate with establishments more
effectively and schedule inspections
more efficiently.
Section 510(j)(1) of the act requires
every person who registers to file with
the Secretary, at the time of registration,
a list of all devices that are being
manufactured, prepared, propagated,
compounded, or processed by the
registrant for commercial distribution.
That list must be prepared in the form
and manner prescribed by the Secretary
and must be accompanied by a copy of
labeling (or the label and package insert)
and, in some cases, advertising, when
requested. Section 510(j)(2) of the FD&C
Act, as amended by section 223 of
FDAAA, requires each person who
registers with the Secretary under this
section to report listing information
updates once each year during the
period beginning on October 1 and
ending on December 31 of each year.
Listing information gives us a current
inventory of marketed devices. These
provisions and others of the FD&C Act,
together with section 701(a) of the FD&C
Act, provide authority for requiring the
submission of the listing information set
forth in this proposal. The device listing
information specified in this proposal
would help us: (1) Develop a more
current, robust inventory of devices as
a counter-terrorism measure; (2)
administer our postmarket surveillance
programs more effectively; (3) facilitate
recalls of products; (4) identify devices
in short supply in the event of a
national emergency; and (5) identify
devices marketed in violation of the
FD&C Act.
Section 510(p) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by section 224 of FDAAA,
requires that registration and listing
information be submitted electronically,
subject to FDA’s grant of waivers to
individual requestors who meet the
criteria set forth in section 510(p).
Electronic receipt of registration and
listing information will enable us to
shift resources from performing more
ministerial tasks, such as data entry, to
pursuing important public health
objectives such as those described in
section I of this document. Electronic
receipt of registration and listing
information also will help us with the
efficient enforcement of the act because
we would be able to distinguish
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situations where there has been
noncompliance with registration and
listing requirements from situations
where there have been no changes in
information. The failure to register or
list is a prohibited act under section
301(p) of the FD&C Act and the failure
to do either renders a device
misbranded under section 502(o) of the
FD&C Act.
VI. Analysis of Economic Impacts
FDA has examined the impacts of the
proposed rule under Executive Order
12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601–612), and the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public
Law 104–4). Executive Order 12866
directs agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, when regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety,
and other advantages; distributive
impacts; and equity). The Office of
Management and Budget has
determined that this proposed rule is a
significant regulatory action as defined
by the Executive order.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires agencies to analyze regulatory
options that would minimize any
significant impact of a rule on small
entities. Because the burdens imposed
by this proposed rule are expected to be
minor, the agency proposes to certify
that the final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Section 202(a) of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies prepare a written
statement, which includes an
assessment of anticipated costs and
benefits, before proposing ‘‘any rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may
result in the expenditure by State, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100,000,000
or more (adjusted annually for inflation)
in any one year.’’ The current threshold
after adjustment for inflation is $130
million, using the most current (2007)
Implicit Price Deflator for the Gross
Domestic Product. FDA does not expect
this proposed rule to result in any 1year expenditure that would meet or
exceed this amount.
We contracted with the Eastern
Research Group, Inc. (ERG), to collect
data, interview industry experts, and
estimate the costs and benefits of the
proposed rule. The analysis in support
of the effects of the proposed rule (ERG
Memo) is on file with the Division of
Dockets Management. ERG identified
several very small impacts, both costs
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14525
and benefits, associated with this
proposed rule. For most of these
impacts, ERG found the incremental
costs and savings to be so small that it
was not a meaningful exercise to
generate numeric estimates.1 ERG was
able identify recurring costs associated
with this proposed rule, plus additional
costs that would not apply to U.S.
establishments. After updating ERG’s
findings with more recent cost
information, we find annual costs of
$340,000 associated with this proposed
rule, and an additional $138,000 that
would only affect non-U.S.
establishments. We were unable to
quantify specific benefits attributable to
the proposed rule. However, we believe
the ultimate use of electronic
registration and listing data, the
mandate under the Bioterrorism Act to
collect additional pieces of registration
data, and the requirement under the
Bioterrorism Act and FDAAA that
information be submitted to FDA
electronically justify taking this action.
A. The Need for Regulation
As discussed elsewhere in this
preamble, section 224 of FDAAA
amended section 510(p) of the FD&C
Act to require establishment
registrations and device listings to be
submitted to FDA by electronic means
unless the Secretary grants a waiver
from electronic submission
requirements. We currently maintain
databases that contain establishment
registration and device listing
information obtained from owners and
operators of device establishments. Prior
to FDAAA, these databases relied on
paper forms submitted by the owners
and operators to us, which were then
forwarded by us to a data entry
contractor for input into our device
registration and listing databases.
Our device registration and listing
databases play an important role in our
efforts to accomplish many regulatory
and statutory objectives. For example,
we can use this information to identify
device manufacturers to facilitate recalls
or information alerts in the case of
potential safety concerns. We also use it
to plan and conduct inspections,
administer postmarket surveillance,
generate estimates of the number of
businesses that are affected by our
rulemaking, and to otherwise exercise
competent oversight of the device
industry.
The quality and completeness of these
databases depends on prompt
submission of information and the
1 ERG memorandum from Cal Franz, et al.,
September 15, 2008, (hereinafter referred to as ERG
Memo), p. 1.
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immediate inclusion of the data in our
system. Under a paper-based
registration and listing system, we were
unable to readily verify the accuracy of
the information submitted and, in some
instances, manufacturers were not
timely in informing us of changes. In
addition, because we were using
physical paper forms, it was possible for
information to be mishandled or lost
before being added to the system,
thereby further reducing the reliability
of the databases.
In accordance with FDAAA, the
agency began collecting registration and
listing information using FURLS, FDA’s
new Internet-based electronic
registration and listing system which
became operational on October 1, 2007.
The electronic submission of
information makes the registration and
listing process more efficient for
industry and allows us to review and
use such information more quickly, thus
helping to ensure that medical devices
will be safe and effective.
Despite the obvious public health
advantages to society of using an
electronic device registration and listing
system, the private returns alone would
not be adequate to move the entire
device industry to a new registration
and listing format that would meet the
requirements of section 510(i) and (p) of
the FD&C Act. Because the social
benefits are largely external to the firms,
the large number of entities operating
individually cannot be expected to
voluntarily move to a new uniform
standard. Few entities would choose to
adopt a new format without significant
private benefits.
B. Background
ERG examined FDA’s databases of
registered device establishments and
listed devices and estimates that
revisions to the existing device
registration and listing regulations
would affect approximately 29,370
owner-operators of approximately
33,500 registered device establishments,
and 89,200 listed devices. Of the
roughly 33,500 registered
establishments, approximately 19,700
are registered as domestic and 13,800
are registered as foreign.2
Under the existing regulations, with
certain exceptions, owners or operators
of establishments that engage in the
manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, assembly, or processing
of a device intended for human use
must, in addition to other requirements,
register their establishments and submit
listing information for each of their
devices in commercial distribution.
2 See
ERG , appendix B, table 1.
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Foreign device establishments engaged
in the manufacture, preparation,
propagation, compounding, or
processing of a device that is imported
or offered for import into the United
States must comply with the registration
and listing requirements, including the
requirement to identify a U.S. agent.
Until the recent change to electronic
submissions mandated by section 224 of
FDAAA, all domestic and foreign
registration and listing information was
submitted using paper forms.
C. The Proposed Regulation
A major objective of this proposal is
to update FDA’s regulations at part 807
to reflect the requirement for electronic
submission of establishment registration
and device listing information as
required by FDAAA. A paper-based
system of registering and listing is
burdensome. It does not facilitate timely
updates, which does not allow for the
best use of these data in inspections and
recalls. We believe that electronic
submission of registration and listing
information improves the quality and
timeliness of information available to
FDA. In addition, a system of electronic
registration and listing improves the
quality and timeliness of information
available to health care professionals
and consumers. Furthermore, to the
extent that these quality improvements
to the registration and listing process
facilitate device recalls, complement
postmarketing surveillance programs,
help ensure the safety of imported
devices, improve the scheduling and
planning of inspections, and otherwise
assist the agency in carrying out its
statutory and regulatory objectives,
there is a broad public health benefit.
Moreover, the development and
maintenance of high quality databases
of information about devices and device
establishments would enhance future
uses of technology in the delivery of
health care. An electronic database that
contains current and accurate
information about devices could, for
example, facilitate the development of
technology that would allow for
communication among devices, giving
them additional functionality and the
potential for interoperability.
This proposed regulation would also
slightly modify the types of information
that would need to be submitted as
registration and listing information.
However, these modifications would be
minor and are generally consistent with
achieving a more accurate and useful
database of device industry information.
D. Estimated Impacts
ERG reviewed the proposed
registration and listing regulation,
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
comparing it to the current provisions,
and projected the impacts of the
proposed regulation. A memorandum
prepared by ERG based on this review
identifies eight areas where revisions to
the current device registration and
listing provisions may affect the cost of
compliance.3 These impacts would stem
from provisions associated with:
• The creation of an account on
FURLS;
• The requirement for submission of
additional information as part of the
annual registration process;
• Modifications to requirements
relating to registration information
updates;
• The requirement for submission of
additional information when listing a
device;
• Changes relating to the requirement
for semiannual review and update of
device listing information;
• The waiver from the requirement to
register and list by electronic means;
• The proposed elimination of the
exemptions from registration and listing
requirements for foreign establishments
whose devices enter a foreign trade zone
and are re-exported from the foreign
trade zone without having entered U.S.
commerce and the exemption for
devices that are imported under section
801(d)(3) of the FD&C Act (import-forexport provision); and
• The proposed elimination of the
exemption from registration and listing
requirements for contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers who do not
commercially distribute the devices.
Because most of the identified
regulatory impacts only slightly increase
or decrease the costs of registering and
listing, sometimes involving offsetting
impacts, we present the impacts
grouped by the eight impact areas
identified previously, as opposed to
trying to present the impacts as distinct
groups of costs and benefits.
1. Creation of FURLS Accounts
Under the proposed rule,
establishments would go through the
one-time process of creating a FURLS
account. According to ERG, the costs
associated with setting up the FURLS
account are negligible.4
2. Changes to Annual Registration
Information
This proposed rule could affect the
burden on establishments by changing
the information they submit in the
annual registration process. ERG found
that differences in the information
collected currently and under the
3 ERG
4 ERG
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memo, p. 5
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emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
proposed rule would be minor and
should not increase the time spent
completing the registration.5 Some of
the additional information is already
submitted voluntarily. For example, the
e-mail addresses for the establishment’s
official correspondent and owneroperator, as well as the universal
resource locator (URL) for the
establishment’s Web site, are already
being collected. There would be little, if
any additional burden for those
establishments not currently providing
this information. There would be
modest savings associated with the
annual registration process, as
establishments would be able to access
and edit registration information online
and would no longer have to wait for
physical forms to be mailed from FDA,
review them, make edits, and mail the
forms back to FDA.
As amended by section 321 of the
Bioterrorism Act, section 510(i) of the
FD&C Act requires foreign
establishments whose devices are
imported or offered for import to the
United States to identify and provide
contact information for importers of the
establishment’s device that are known
to the establishment and also those
persons who import or offer for import
the device into the United States.
According to the ERG memo, foreign
establishments identifying importers
known to them and persons who import
or offer for import the establishments’
devices would typically be identifying
one or two entities of each type with
readily available contact information, so
the impact would be negligible.6 OMB
Circular A–4 directs us to carefully
evaluate new U.S. rules that might act
as non-tariff barriers to imported goods.
As the burden to these foreign
establishments would be quite small
and would not have a significant
adverse effect on trade, the impact on
U.S. consumers from this provision
would be negligible.
3. Changes Relating to the Requirement
to Update Registration Information
Under proposed § 807.22(b)(2),
establishments would be required to
update their registration within 30 days
if their registration information were to
change. Current § 807.26 requires that
establishments update registration
information for a change in ownership
or a change in the location of the
establishment. As the proposed rule
includes a broader set of circumstances
requiring a mandatory update, it has the
potential to be slightly more
burdensome. Under the proposed rule,
5 ERG
6 ERG
memo, p. 6.
memo, p. 5.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
13:52 Mar 25, 2010
however, establishments would provide
updates electronically, as opposed to
submitting such information to FDA
using a paper form as required by
current § 807.26. ERG found that the
ability to submit updated information
through FURLS rather than completing
and mailing paper forms would result in
a net reduction in administrative burden
and, therefore, a cost savings to
establishments. ERG did not quantify
the amount of the estimated savings, but
we feel it would roughly negate any
increase in burden from the increased
likelihood of a mandatory update.
4. Requirement for Additional Device
Listing Information
Under proposed § 807.25,
establishments would be required to
submit additional information,
including 510(k) numbers and HDE
numbers among the types of premarket
submission numbers submitted to FDA
for non-exempt devices. Establishments
would also submit all proprietary and
brand names under which each device
is marketed. Although the agency
already collects proprietary or brand
names as part of device listings, the
device listing form specified for use
under the existing regulation has a
single block of 80 characters for
proprietary and brand names, which
may have been restricting the amount of
information establishments have been
providing. In contrast, establishments
using FURLS to list their devices have
an unlimited amount of space within
which to provide information and
therefore could submit more data.
According to the ERG memo, device
listings would rarely have more than
three proprietary or brand names, so the
additional information that
establishments would be providing
under the proposed rule would be
limited.7
Under proposed § 807.25(g)(4),
establishments also would be required
to submit 510(k) and HDE numbers for
non-exempt devices as part of the listing
process. This information has been
collected by FDA on a voluntary basis
since 2005. It is our experience from
processing these forms that most
establishments submitting device
listings since this practice began in 2005
already provide 510(k) and HDE
numbers. Because these establishments
already are complying with the
proposal, they would not face an
additional burden as a result of this new
requirement. However, there was an
additional burden associated with
providing 510(k) and HDE numbers for
those devices listed prior to 2005.
7 ERG
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PO 00000
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Frm 00028
Fmt 4702
Because we have already begun to
collect information on these devices
electronically, much of this one-time
burden has already been incurred.
Based on a query of non-exempt listings
included in FDA’s registration and
listing database, FDA estimated that
9,300 owners or operators would
provide submission numbers for
approximately 31,000 device listings.
We believe that affected owners or
operators needed only a few minutes to
look up this information from readily
available sources.8 ERG did not attempt
to quantify this very small burden, but
noted that the inclusion of the 510(k)
number in the device listing would
result in significant benefits. Such
information would improve our
postmarket surveillance efforts by
permitting devices to be tracked based
on the submission number assigned to
the particular device, as opposed to the
previous method of tracking based on
the reported product codes which did
not necessarily correspond to the
product codes under which a device
was cleared. Also, having the registrant
supply the premarket submission
number and FDA determine the
appropriate product code saves time, as
incorrect product codes can lead to
delays in listing.
5. Changes Relating to Review and
Update of Device Listings
Section 510(j)(2) of the FD&C Act, as
amended by section 223 of FDAAA,
now requires device listings to be
updated once each year during the
period beginning on October 1 and
ending on December 31. Previously, as
reflected in the current registration and
listing regulations, registrants had to
review and update their device listings
on a semiannual basis, during June and
December. In the past, FDA has not
strictly enforced this requirement but
has encouraged establishments to
update their listings throughout the year
whenever information has changed.
Thus, although the required updates
would be less frequent and less
burdensome, we recognize the potential
for a minor impact associated with
increased enforcement of an existing
requirement. We believe any additional
impact would be extremely small, and
we do not attempt to quantify it.
6. Requests for a Waiver from
Submitting Information Electronically
Under the proposed rule, parties for
whom registering and listing by
electronic means is not reasonable may
request a waiver from FDA. Because one
would only need to have access to a
8 ERG
Sfmt 4702
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memo, p. 6.
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computer, Internet access, and an e-mail
address to register and list by electronic
means, we do not anticipate that we will
receive many requests for waivers.
For the first few months of operation
(i.e., October through December 2007) of
the Web-based system, , FDA received
fewer than 10 requests for waivers from
the requirement to submit registration
and listing information electronically.
As FDA received electronic submissions
for more than 16,000 establishments
over that period, these requests amount
to about 0.06 percent of the total
number of establishments that
responded.
Based on information taken from our
databases as of October 2007, FDA
estimated there were 29,370 owners or
operators who collectively registered a
total of 33,490 device establishments. If
0.06 percent of the 33,490 total device
establishments would request waivers
from FDA, there would be 20 requests
(33,490 x 0.0006). We estimate that the
annual burden on these establishments
would be an hour of time from a midlevel manager to draft, approve, and
mail a letter. Assuming a burden of 20
hours and a labor cost of $41 per hour
including benefits, the cost for all
affected establishments would be $820
($41 per hour x 20 hours).9 This
estimate may overstate the actual
burden, as we received only nine waiver
requests in 2008.
We anticipate a small number of
additional firms would enter the device
industry over the next several years and
would need to list and register. To the
extent that a small fraction of these
firms would request waivers, there may
be small additional costs in the future.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
7. Elimination of Exemptions for Some
Foreign Establishments
Under current § 807.40(a), foreign
establishments are not required to
comply with the registration and listing
requirements if their device enters a
foreign trade zone and is re-exported
from that foreign trade zone without
having entered U.S. commerce. As
previously discussed, the proposed rule
would eliminate the exemption from
registration and listing requirements for
such establishments.
Current § 807.40(c), which states that
no device may be imported or offered
for import into the United States unless
the device is listed and is manufactured,
prepared, propagated, compounded, or
processed at a registered foreign
establishment, also states that this
9 We use a mean wage rate of $31.55 for
compliance officers in the medical equipment and
supplies manufacturing industry and add 30
percent for benefits.
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13:52 Mar 25, 2010
Jkt 220001
restriction does not apply to a device
imported under section 801(d)(3) of the
FD&C Act (‘‘import-for-export’’
provision). As previously discussed, we
are proposing to eliminate the
exemption from registration and listing
requirements for devices imported
under section 801(d)(3). This means
such devices would have to be listed
and the foreign establishments that
manufacture these devices would have
to register with FDA. ERG estimates that
the burden of listing would be 2.5 hours
per affected device. Assuming an hourly
labor cost of $41 per hour, the cost of
this provision to foreign establishments
would be $103 per device.
ERG has reviewed the databases
maintained by FDA’s Division of Import
Operations and Policy and found that
1,344 shipments of devices entered the
United States under the ‘‘import-forexport’’ provision in 2006.10 This figure
represents approximately 0.13 percent
of the device shipments to the United
States. If each of these shipments
required establishment registration and
device listing, the cost to foreign
exporters would be less than $138,000
(1,344 shipments x 2.5 hours per
shipment x $41/hour). These are onetime costs, as subsequent shipments of
the same device would not require an
additional registration and listing. ERG
concludes foreign establishments may
incur future costs if there are shipments
of devices not previously listed and
assumes the estimated first year cost is
incurred annually. We believe future
annual costs would be substantially less
than $138,000 but we do not attempt to
quantify them.
ERG was unable to obtain information
on the number of devices and firms
affected by the loss of the exemption for
devices imported into foreign trade
zones. We believe the impact of this loss
of exemption on individual foreign
firms would be very small, but welcome
comment on this issue.
Domestic device establishments
would not face a substantial burden as
a result of the elimination of these
exemptions. As these devices are not
intended for U.S. commerce, there
would be no impact on the domestic
market for these devices. Moreover,
based on the small cost per affected
device, we believe the elimination of
these exemptions would have a
negligible impact on U.S. industries
doing ‘‘import-for-export’’ and operating
in foreign trade zones.
For this analysis, we assume that the
foreign establishments that would be
losing these exemptions are foreign
entities and not merely a foreign
10 ERG
PO 00000
memo, p. 10.
Frm 00029
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
presence of a domestic entity. We lack
detailed information on these
establishments and welcome comment
on this issue.
8. Elimination of Registration and
Listing Exemptions for Contract
Manufacturers and Sterilizers Who Do
Not Commercially Distribute the
Devices
Under current § 807.20(a)(2), (c)(1),
and (c)(2), contract manufacturers and
contract sterilizers are exempt from
registration and listing obligations if
they make or sterilize a device
according to another person’s
specifications for commercial
distribution by the person who
developed the specifications. This
proposed rule would eliminate the
exemption from registration and listing
for contract manufacturers and contract
sterilizers who do not commercially
distribute. This means that those
contract manufacturers and contract
sterilizers that currently do not register
or list would be required to do so.
Moreover, because there are recurring
obligations associated with registration
and listing, these firms would bear an
additional annual burden.
According to our registration and
listing database, as of October 2007,
there were 1,304 registered contract
manufacturers who had not previously
listed any products. Of these 1,304
establishments, 736 re-registered in
2006. We also believe there may be
contract manufacturers not registered
that would be registering for the first
time because of the loss of exemption.
We do not know the number of contract
manufacturers that would be required to
register and list, but for the purposes of
this analysis, we estimate that 736
establishments that would need to
register and initially list products. We
invite comment on this estimate.
Based on the October 2007 estimates,
the registration and listing database
contains about 89,200 listed devices and
approximately 33,500 registered
establishments, or about 2.66 devices
per establishment. If that ratio were to
hold for the estimated 736 affected
contract manufacturers, we would
expect 1,958 additional device listings
under the proposed rule.
Between 1999 and 2006, there was an
average of 306 initial contract
manufacturer registrations each year.
We therefore estimate 306 additional
contract manufacturers would initially
register in 2008 (for fiscal year 2009)
and would also incur costs to list their
devices, for a total of 1,042. At 2.66
devices per establishment, this would
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establishment ($103 per listing x 4.68
listings). Across all affected contract
manufacturers, including those
registering for fiscal year 2009, the cost
would be a recurring $284,000 ($41 per
hour x 2.5 hours x 2,772 listings). For
contract sterilizers, the cost would be
$56,000 ($41 per hour x 2.5 hours x 543
listings). Thus, the impact on contract
manufacturers and contract sterilizers
would be an annual $340,000 ($284,000
+ $56,000). We recognize that we may
not be aware of some contract sterilizers
that have never registered. We believe
there are few if any such firms and do
not account for them in our analysis, but
invite comment on this issue.
The loss of the exemption for contract
manufacturers and sterilizers who do
not commercially distribute the devices
will not only result in social economic
costs, but will also result in transfers
associated with the payment of user
fees. Contract manufacturers and
sterilizers that are required to register
result in 814 additional listings, for a
total of 2,772.11
According to our registration
information, fewer than 160
establishments perform contract
sterilizations only. Of these, 116 do not
list devices. Our registration and listing
database includes 533 listings for 114
contract sterilizers, or about 4.68
devices per establishment. Under the
proposed rule, the 116 contract
sterilizers who currently register would
also have to list. Assuming these
contract sterilizers would list 4.68
devices per establishment, this would
result in 543 additional listings.
ERG estimates that the process of
registration and listing would require
2.5 hours of time per listed device each
year.12 At a labor rate of $41 per hour,
including benefits, the cost would be
$103 per device or about $270 per
contract manufacturing establishment
($103 per listing x 2.66 listings) and
$480 per contract sterilizing
14529
will also be required to pay user fees.
According to section 212 of FDAAA, the
Fiscal Year (FY) 2009 establishment
registration fee is $1,851. At that rate,
we estimate FY 2009 fees of $2.14
million, $1.93 million paid by the 1,042
contract manufacturers and $215,000
paid by the 116 contract sterilizers.
Table 1 of this document summarizes
the projected quantified impacts of this
proposed rule. The total annual costs
are $340,000. Foreign establishments
would face an additional annual burden
of $138,000 due to the loss of the
exemptions from registration and listing
requirements relating to devices
entering a foreign trade zone that are
later re-exported without having entered
U.S. commerce and devices that are
imported into the United States under
section 801(d)(3) of the FD&C Act. There
would also be a transfer of $2.14 million
in additional user fees paid by contract
manufacturers and sterilizers.
TABLE 1.—PROJECTED IMPACTS OF THE PROPOSED RULE
Establishment Category
No. of Affected
Establishments/Devices
Incremental
Time
Requests for a Waiver from Submitting
Information Electronically
20 establishments
1 hr
$41
$820
Foreign establishments shipping to
United States under import-for-export
and to foreign trade zones
none2
2.5 hrs
$41
$02
Elimination of Exemptions for Contract
Manufacturers
2,772 devices, 1,042 establishments
2.5 hrs
$41
$284,000
Elimination of Exemptions for Contract
Sterilizers
543 devices, 116 establishments
2.5 hrs
$41
$56,000
negligible
--
--
negligible3
1,178 establishments 3,315 devices
--
--
$340,000
All other
Total
1 Average
Cost per Hour1
Total Annual Cost3
hourly wage for medical equipment and supplies compliance officer, adjusted for benefits.
would not be expected to affect U.S. establishments. An estimated 1,344 foreign establishments would face additional annual costs
2 Provision
of $138,000.
3 Estimated incremental time costs are offset by incremental time savings.
TABLE 2.—ECONOMIC TRANSFERS ASSOCIATED WITH THE PROPOSED RULE
To
Description
1,042 Contract Manufacturers and 116 Contract
Sterilizers
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
From
U.S. Government
Establishment Registration Fees
The proposed rule would result in
benefits associated with an electronic
registration and listing database that
would provide more up-to-date and
complete information. The electronic
registration and listing database system
could also support future medical and
11 We do not follow the assumption in the ERG
memo that half of these contract manufacturers
would not register and pay user fees.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
13:52 Mar 25, 2010
Jkt 220001
health information technology
initiatives. The proposed rule would
increase the efficiency of the registration
and listing process by eliminating all or
nearly all paper submissions. With
registration and listing in an electronic
format, we are able to review the
12 ERG
PO 00000
Cost per Entity
$1,851
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
$2.14 million
submitted information more quickly and
can contact submitting firms
immediately through email if any
additional information is needed. In
addition, having a database of registered
establishments and listed devices that is
more accurate and complete can
memo, p. 9.
Frm 00030
Total Cost
E:\FR\FM\26MRP1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 58 / Friday, March 26, 2010 / Proposed Rules
increase patient safety. For example, an
electronic database that includes 510(k)
clearance numbers and current product
codes for devices would help facilitate
timely notification of recalls of certain
unsafe devices and prompt
identification of the affected
manufacturers.
Although the scope of the proposed
rule does not extend beyond registration
and listing, the resulting high-quality,
electronic database would facilitate
future uses of technology for the public
benefit. A current electronic database of
device information could, for example,
facilitate the development of future
devices utilizing wireless connectivity
and the interoperation of such devices
with hospital information systems, or
with handheld personal digital assistant
(PDA)-type clients used by health care
providers or those managing hospital
inventories.
Additionally, having a paper-based
registration and listing system is
inconsistent with section 510(p) of the
FD&C Act, as amended by section 224
of FDAAA, and might deter the medical
device industry and healthcare
providers from investing in new
initiatives that would make use of
electronic device listing and
establishment registration data.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires agencies to analyze regulatory
options that would minimize any
significant impact of a rule on small
entities. The impact of this proposed
rule is almost entirely attributable to the
requirement that contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers register and list.
We have estimated the impacts on small
entities and find that the costs
associated with registering and listing
would not be a significant burden for
even the smallest of contract
manufacturers and contract sterilizers.
Moreover, failing to remove this
exemption for contract manufacturers
and sterilizers would reduce the
benefits potentially realized from this
proposed rule. These benefits would
include improving the quality and
timeliness of information, facilitating
device recalls, complementing
postmarket surveillance programs,
ensuring the safety of imported devices,
and improving the scheduling and
planning of inspections. Requiring that
contract manufacturers and sterilizers
register and list allows for the
appropriate oversight of these types of
facilities. For other elements of this
proposed rule, the costs per entity are
very small and we do not believe that
this proposed rule would have a
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13:52 Mar 25, 2010
Jkt 220001
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
As described earlier in this preamble,
this proposed rule would revise the
agency’s regulations at part 807 to make
them consistent with the requirement
under FDAAA that the agency shift to
an electronic registration and listing
format. The incremental costs to
establishments making this switch to
electronic registration and listing are so
small as to be difficult to quantify.
Certain elements of the proposed rule
may be burdensome to some entities,
but these incremental burdens are
estimated to be extremely small. The
cost of submitting a waiver claiming
electronic listing and registration to be
unreasonable would be an estimated
$41. The cost of registering and listing
a device because of the loss of the
exemptions from registration and listing
requirements for devices imported into
foreign trade zones or imported under
section 801(d)(3) of the FD&C Act is not
expected to have an effect on domestic
establishments. Other elements of the
proposed rule involve the submission of
information not currently required but
readily available and the estimated cost
of compliance would be so small as to
be difficult to estimate.
Contract manufacturers and contract
sterilizers who do not commercially
distribute the devices they make or
sterilize would be faced with a new
requirement to register and list. We do
not know how many of the affected
contract manufacturers and contract
sterilizers would be categorized as
small. As shown in table 1 of this
document, we estimate 1,042 affected
contract manufacturers and 116 affected
contract sterilizers. Our internal
databases include some contract
manufacturers and sterilizers that have
in the past voluntarily registered. A
review of the contract sterilizers in this
database indicate that many are
described in external databases as being
part of NAICS code 339113 (Surgical
Appliance and Supplies
Manufacturing). Because of the specific
expertise, capital requirements, and
economies of scale associated with
contract sterilization, we expect contract
sterilizers would have more employees
and more revenues per employee than
would a typical establishment in this
class. Medical device contract
manufacturers fit in NAICS code 339112
(Surgical and Medical Instrument
Manufacturing). For both of these
industry classifications, the U.S. Small
Business Administration has defined a
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
small business as one with 500 or fewer
employees.13
According to the U.S. Census, there
are 1,352 establishments in class 339112
with 1,302 of them (96 percent) having
fewer than 500 employees.14 Census
information on class 339113 lists 1,845
establishments, with 1,805 of them (98
percent) having fewer than 500
employees.15 Applying these profiles to
our estimated contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers, there would be
1,000 small affected contract
manufacturers (96 percent of 1,042) and
114 small affected contract sterilizers
(98 percent of 118).
For class 339112 covering contract
manufacturers, we consider the smallest
establishment group with one to four
employees. There are 388
establishments with a total of 839
employees and a total value of
shipments of approximately $130
million. Average revenue per employee
is approximately $150,000. The average
establishment in this group has 2.2
employees and receipts of $331,000. As
discussed in section V.I.D of this
document, establishment registration
user fees are $1,851 for FY 2009. As
shown in table 1 of this document, the
estimated annual burden of listing a
device is 2.5 hours at $41 per hour, or
$103. A small contract manufacturer
with a single listed device would face
an annual burden of $1,851 plus $103,
or $1,954, which is 0.59 percent of
annual revenues.
Assuming the smallest contract
sterilizers have five to nine employees,
that particular group in class 339113 has
320 establishments with a total of 2,165
employees and a total value of
shipments of approximately $380
million. Revenue per employee is
approximately $175,000. The average
establishment has 6.8 employees and
receipts of $1.2 million. Contract
sterilizers would face an annual
establishment fee of $1,851 plus a cost
of $103 per listed device. A small
contract sterilizer with two listed
devices would face an annual burden of
$1,851 plus $2,057, or 0.17 percent of
annual revenues.
13 U. S. Small Business Administration, ‘‘Table of
Small Business Size Standards Matched to North
American Industry Classification System Codes,’’
August 22, 2008, https://www.sba.gov/idc/groups/
public/documents/sba_homepage/serv_sstd_table
pdf.pdf.
14 U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 Economic Census,
‘‘Surgical and Medical Instrument Manufacturing:
2002,’’ Table 4, p. 4, released December 2004, https://
www.census.gov/prod/ec02/ec0231i339112.pdf.
15 U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 Economic Census,
‘‘Surgical Appliance and Supplies Manufacturing,’’
Table 4, p. 4, released December 2004, https://
www.census.gov/prod/ec02/ec0231i339113.pdf.
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A $41 burden associated with a
waiver request would be about 0.01
percent of revenues for a small entity
with revenues in the hundreds of
thousands of dollars. As discussed
earlier in this section and in section
V.I.D of this document, other impacts
associated with this proposed rule are
all extremely small. We therefore
tentatively conclude that the proposed
rule, if issued, would not have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. We also
believe affected entities currently
possess the skills required to comply
with the provisions of this proposed
rule. FDA requests comment on the
issue of whether this proposed rule
would have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
FDA considered regulatory
alternatives such as not regulating and
not requiring registration and listing by
contract manufacturers and contract
sterilizers who do not commercially
distribute devices. As explained earlier
in this preamble, the electronic
submission of information is mandated
under FDAAA. Section A discusses the
need to regulate in greater detail. The
benefits associated with agency
oversight of contract manufacturers and
contract sterilizers justify the estimated
costs of requiring that they register and
list.
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VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This proposed rule contains
information collection provisions that
are subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520). A description of
these provisions is given below with an
estimate of the annual reporting and
recordkeeping burden. Included in the
estimate is the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing each collection of
information.
FDA invites comments on: (1)
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of FDA’s functions,
including whether the information will
have practical utility; (2) the accuracy of
FDA’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used; (3)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques,
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when appropriate, and other forms of
information technology.
Implementation of Sections 222, 223,
and 224 of the Food and Drug
Amendments Act of 2007 (OMB Control
No. 0910–0625)—Revision
FDA is proposing to amend its
regulations governing medical device
establishment registration and device
listing. The proposed revisions would
modify FDA’s current regulations at part
807 to reflect recent statutory
amendments to the device registration
and listing provisions of the FD&C Act.
FDAAA, which was enacted on
September 27, 2007, amended section
510 of the FD&C Act by requiring
domestic and foreign device
establishments to begin submitting their
registration and device listing
information to FDA by electronic means
rather than on paper forms, and also
specified the timeframes when
establishments are required to submit
such information. In accordance with
FDAAA, the agency launched FDA’s
Unified Registration and Listing System
(FURLS), an internet-based registration
and listing system. FDAAA requires
electronic submission of device
registration and listing information
unless FDA grants a waiver request.
In addition, this proposal would
facilitate FDA’s collection of additional
registration information from foreign
establishments as required by the Public
Health Security and Bioterrorism
Preparedness and Response Act of 2002
(Bioterrorism Act). It also would update
certain provisions in part 807 to
improve the quality of registration and
listing information available to FDA.
FDA relies on having complete and
accurate registration and listing
information in order to accomplish a
number of important public health
objectives.
A. Statutory Compliance
To comply with the statutory deadline
under the provisions of FDAAA for
medical device establishment
registration and device listing by
electronic means, including waiver
provisions, FDA initially obtained a 6month OMB approval of the collection
of information requirements under the
emergency processing provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (the PRA),
and subsequently obtained a 3-year
approval of these requirements under
the same assigned OMB Control No.
0910–0625. With OMB approval of the
collection of information requirements,
FDA took several actions: (1) Developed
an electronic form ‘‘Device Registration
and Listing Module,’’ Form FDA 3673
and (2) developed and implemented the
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14531
guidance entitled ‘‘Guidance for
Industry and FDA Staff-Implementation
of Medical Device Establishments
Registration and Device Listing
Requirements Established by the Food
and Drug Administration Amendments
Act of 2007.’’ This guidance among
other things explained the recent
changes in the device registration and
listing program and the process
(instructions) for using FURLS, an
Internet-based registration and listing
system.
B. Transition Process From Paper to
Electronic Submission
The information collection
requirements for paper submissions
were approved under the assigned OMB
control number 0910–0387 with the
associated Forms FDA 2891, 2891a, and
2892. Upon approval of electronic
registration and listing information
collection requirements under FDAAA,
FDA: ( 1) Replaced the paper forms FDA
2891, 2891a, and 2892 with the
electronic data collection instrument,
Form FDA 3673; (2) revised the
collection of information 0910–0387 for
paper submissions to include only
nonregistration and listing paperwork
requirement, thereby reducing the
annual reporting burden requirements
(the registration and listing
requirements under FDAAA were
updated as a revision to the collection
0910–0625); (3) following notice in a
June 17, 2007, letter to firms, shut down
the manual data entry system on
September 15, 2007, and began using
the new electronic system on October 1,
2007; and (4) sent each firm a letter on
October 1, 2007, providing account and
password information for the new
system.
Description: In accordance with the
collection of information entitled
‘‘Establishment Registration and Device
Listing for Manufacturers and Initial
Importers of Devices,’’ medical device
establishment owners and operators will
be required to electronically submit
establishment registration and device
listing information.
Section 510(c) of the FD&C Act
requires owners or operators of
domestic establishments upon first
engaging in the ‘‘manufacture,
preparation, propagation, compounding,
or processing‘‘ of a device or devices in
those establishments to immediately
register their name and place of
business and such establishment.
Section 510(a)(1) of the FD&C Act
defines the term ‘‘manufacture,
preparation, propagation, compounding,
or processing’’ to include ‘‘repackaging
or otherwise changing the container,
wrapper, or labeling of any * * *
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device package in furtherance of the
distribution of the * * * device from
the original place of manufacture to the
person who makes final delivery or sale
to the ultimate consumer or user.’’
Section 510(a)(2) of the FD&C Act
mandates that the term ‘‘name’’ include,
among other things, the name of each
partner of a partnership, and the name
of each corporate officer and director of
a corporation. An owner or operator of
a registered establishment must also
immediately register any additional
establishment that he owns or operates
in any State and in which he begins the
‘‘manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, or processing’’ of a device
(section 510(d) of the FD&C Act). An
owner or operator of any establishment
that engages in these activities must also
re-register its establishment once each
year during the period beginning on
October 1 and ending on December 31
of each year (section 510(b) of the FD&C
Act, as amended by FDAAA).
Section 510(i) of the FD&C Act
contains certain registration
requirements pertaining to foreign
establishments (e.g., submission of the
name of each importer of the
establishment’s device in the United
States that is known to the
establishment, submission of the name
of each person who imports or offers for
import the establishment’s device to the
United States for purposes of
importation). Section 510(g) of the
FD&C Act provides for certain
exemptions from the registration
requirements. In addition, section
510(p) of the FD&CAct, as amended by
FDAAA, requires the electronic
submission of device registration and
listing information unless the Secretary
grants a request for a waiver because use
of electronic means is not reasonable for
the person requesting the waiver.
Section 510(j)(1) of the FD&C Act
requires that every person who registers
must, at the time of registration, submit
a list of all devices that are being
manufactured, prepared, propagated,
compounded, or processed by him or
her for commercial distribution which
have not been previously listed by him
or her. This information must be
submitted in the form and manner
prescribed by the Secretary (section
510(j)(1) of the FD&C Act). Prior to
FDAAA, section 510(j)(2) of the FD&C
Act required certain changes in listing
information to be reported every June
and December, including any material
changes in information previously
submitted under the listing provisions.
This information must now be provided
only once each year during the period
beginning on October 1 and ending on
December 31.
Section 510(e) of the FD&C Act
permits the Secretary to prescribe a
uniform system for the identification of
devices intended for human use and
may require that persons who are
required to list such devices under
section 510(j) shall list such devices in
accordance with such a system. The
disclosure provision in section 510(f) of
the FD&C Act requires the Secretary to
make available for inspection any
registration filed under section 510.
Section 510(f) also provides that certain
listing information must be exempt from
disclosure unless the Secretary finds
that such exemption would be
inconsistent with protection of the
public health.
Complete and accurate registration
and listing information is necessary to
accomplish a number of statutory and
regulatory objectives, such as:
Identification of establishments
producing marketed medical devices,
identification of establishments
producing a specific device when that
device is in short supply or is needed
for national emergency, facilitation of
recalls for devices marketed by owners
and operators of device establishments,
identification and cataloguing of
marketed devices, administering
postmarketing surveillance programs for
devices; identification of devices
marketed in violation of the law;
identification and control of devices
imported into the country from foreign
establishments; and scheduling and
planning inspections of registered
establishments under section 704 of the
FD&C Act.
The electronic collection of
establishment registration and device
listing information from medical device
establishment owners and operators also
furthers the purpose of several statutes,
including: The FDAAA, the
Bioterrorism Act, MDUFMA, and GPEA.
Description of Respondents: Owners
or operators of establishments that
engage in the manufacturing,
preparation, propagation, compounding,
or processing of a device or devices
must register their establishments and
submit listing information for each of
their devices in commercial
distribution. Notwithstanding certain
exceptions, foreign device
establishments that manufacture,
prepare, propagate, compound, or
process a device that is imported or
offered for import into the United States
must also comply with the registration
and listing requirements. The total
annual estimated burden imposed by
this collection of information is 103,536
hours annually.
FDA estimates the burden of this
collection of information as follows:
TABLE 3.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN1
21 CFR Section
FDA Form Number
Annual
Frequency per
Response
No. of
Respondents
Total Annual
Responses
Hours per
Response
Total
Hours
807.20(a)3
3,673
800
1
800
0.75
600
807.21(a)3
3,673
0.5
63
1
125
20
1
20
1
20
807.21(b)3
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
125
807.21(b)2
1
1
1
1
1
807.22(a)3
3,673
2,566
1
2,566
0.5
1,283
807.22(b)(1)3
3,673
29,100
1
29,100
0.75
21,825
807.22(b)(2)3
3,673
3,000
1
3,000
0.5
1,500
807.22(b)(3)3
3,673
24,870
1
24,870
1
24,870
100
1
100
1
100
807.26(e)3
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 58 / Friday, March 26, 2010 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN1—Continued
21 CFR Section
Annual
Frequency per
Response
No. of
Respondents
FDA Form Number
Total Annual
Responses
Hours per
Response
Total
Hours
807.34(a)2
20
1
20
1
20
807.34(a)3
1
1
1
1
1
807.40(b)(2)3
3,673
50
1
50
807.40(b)(3)3
3,673
1,836
1
807.41(a)3
3,673
11,348
807.41(b)3
3,673
11,348
0.5
25
1,836
0.25
459
1
11,348
0.5
5,674
1
11,348
0.5
5,674
Total one time burden
40
Total recurring burden
62,075
1 There
2 One
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
Time Burden
Burden
3 Recurring
TABLE 4.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING BURDEN1
21 CFR Section
No. of
Respondents
Annual Frequency
per Recordkeeper
Total Annual
Records
Hours per
Record
Total Hours
807.25(d)2
33,490
1
33,490
.25
8,373
807.262
16,524
4
66,096
.5
33,048
Total
1 There
41,421
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
burden.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
2 Recurring
The currently approved reporting and
recordkeeping burden for electronic
registration and listing under OMB No.
0910–0625 is 71,319. The estimated
reporting and recordkeeping burden for
electronic registration and listing under
the proposed rule is 103,536 hours, an
increase of 32,217 hours. This increase
is due to an under estimate of the
original burden estimate for 0910–0625
and the incremental increase of
respondents no longer exempt from
these requirements.
Burden estimates are based on recent
experience with the existing medical
device registration and listing program
and the economic analysis provided by
ERG. The changes to the actual data
collected are, with one exception, very
minor. We are assuming that it will take
approximately the same amount of time
to enter the data online using FURLS as
it does to use the portable document
format (PDF)-enabled forms that had
been used for initial establishment
registration prior to FURLS becoming
operational in October 2007. Any
additional burden associated with
creating and using the Web-based
system accounts (as shown in table 3 of
this document under § 807.21(a)) should
be offset by the elimination of the need
to re-enter identifying information
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concerning the establishment or product
every time registration or listing
information is updated, which was the
case when updating such information
using the PDF-enabled forms.
The recurring burden for the new data
collection under § 807.41 (importrelated information provided by foreign
companies exporting to the United
States) was estimated based on the ERG
memo. This report stated that foreign
establishments would typically be
identifying one or two importers and
one or two persons who import or offer
for import with readily available contact
information.
The estimates for creation of new user
accounts under § 807.21(a) are based on
the current number of owners or
operators, and experience in account
creation using the existing FURLS for
Food Facility Registration. The
estimates for the recurring years assume
a similar increase in the number of new
owner or operator numbers as were
created in FY 2006.
The estimate for § 807.25(d) in table 5
of this document (recordkeeping
burden) reflects the requirement that
owners or operators keep a list of
officers, directors, and partners for each
establishment. Owners or operators will
need to provide this information only
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
when requested by FDA. However, it is
assumed that some effort will need to be
expended to keep such lists current.
The requirements shown in table 5 for
proposed § 807.26 (renumbered from
§ 807.31), have not changed based on
this revision to the registration and
listing regulations. They reflect other
recordkeeping requirements for devices
listed with FDA, and the requirement to
provide these records when requested
by FDA. They are based on experience
FDA has had with the existing
regulation.
This proposed rule also refers to
previously approved collections of
information found in FDA regulations.
These collections of information are
subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520). The collections
of information in § 807.35(b) have been
approved under OMB control number
0910–0052. This rule is not going to
impact the burden in 0910–0052 that is
already accounted for in that
information collection.
To further clarify and track how the
burden and associated changes for this
proposed rule have been accounted for
during the transition process from paper
to electronic in which the information is
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 58 / Friday, March 26, 2010 / Proposed Rules
currently submitted by electronic means
through FURLS, FDA has developed
tables 5 and 6 of this document as
follows:
TABLE 5.—REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
21 CFR Section/
OMB Control No. 0910–0387
Section of the 2007 Amendments/
OMB Control No. 0910–0625
21 CFR Section/
NPRM
Paper Format
Electronic Format
Electronic Format
Forms FDA 2891,2891a, and 2892
Form FDA 3673
Form FDA 3673
807.22(a) and 807.40
222
807.22(a)
807.22(b)
223
807.22(b)(3)
807.22(a) and 807.40
224
807.22(b)(1)
807.22(b)
224
807.22(a)
Not reported
224
807.21(b)
Not reported
224
807.21(c)
TABLE 6.—RECORDKEEPING REQUIREMENTS
21 CFR Section/
OMB Control No 0910–0387
Section of the 2007 Amendments
OMB Control No. 0910–0625
21 CFR Section/
NPRM
Paper Format
Electronic Format
Electronic Format
Forms FDA 2891,2891a, and 2892
Form FDA 3673
Form FDA 3673
Not reported
222
807.25(d)
807.31
223
807.26
In compliance with the PRA, the
agency has submitted the revised
information collection provisions of this
proposed rule to OMB for review.
Interested persons are requested to send
comments regarding the information
collection to OMB (see DATES and
ADDRESSES sections of this document).
VIII. Environmental Impact
The agency has determined under 21
CFR 25.30(h) that this action is of a type
that does not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on
the human environment. Therefore,
neither an environmental assessment
nor an environmental impact statement
is required.
IX. Proposed Effective Date
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
FDA proposes that any final rule
based on this proposal become effective
90 days after its date of publication in
the Federal Register.
X. Proposed Compliance Dates
The proposed rule does not affect selfexecuting statutory responsibilities.
Those FDAAA provisions establishing
registration and listing requirements
that are self-executing must be complied
with in accordance with the statute and
do not depend on this proposed rule
becoming final.
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XI. Federalism
FDA has analyzed this proposed rule
in accordance with the principles set
forth in Executive Order 13132. FDA
has determined that the proposed rule,
if finalized, would not contain policies
that would have substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship
between the National Government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.
Accordingly, the agency tentatively
concludes that the proposed rule does
not contain policies that have
federalism implications as defined in
the Executive order and, consequently,
a federalism summary impact statement
is not required.
of Dockets Management between 9 a.m.
and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
XIII. References
The following references have been
placed on display in the Division of
Dockets Management (see ADDRESSES),
and may be seen by interested persons
between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday. (FDA has verified the
Web site addresses, but we are not
responsible for any subsequent changes
to the Web sites after this document
publishes in the Federal Register.
XII. Request for Comments
Interested persons may submit to the
Division of Dockets Management (see
ADDRESSES) written or electronic
comments regarding this document.
Submit a single copy of electronic
comments or two paper copies of any
mailed comments, except that
individuals may submit one paper copy.
Comments are to be identified with the
docket number found in brackets in the
heading of this document. Received
comments may be seen in the Division
1. Bureau of Labor Statistics, May 2008,
National Industry-Specific Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates, NAICS
339100—Medical Equipment and Supplies
Manufacturing, Occupation (SOC code):
(131041) https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/
naics4_339100.htm.
2. Eastern Research Group memorandum
from Cal Franz, Derek Singer, and John
Eyraud to FDA, September 15, 2008.
3. Office of Management and Budget,
Circular A–4, Regulatory Analysis,
Washington, DC, 2003, https://www.white
house.gov/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf.
List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 807
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Imports, Medical devices, Reporting
and Recordkeeping requirements.
Therefore, under the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act, and under
authority delegated to the Commissioner
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 58 / Friday, March 26, 2010 / Proposed Rules
of Food and Drugs, it is proposed that
21 CFR part 807 be amended as follows:
PART 807—ESTABLISHMENT
REGISTRATION AND DEVICE LISTING
FOR MANUFACTURERS AND INITIAL
IMPORTERS OF DEVICES
1. The authority citation for 21 CFR
part 807 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 351, 352,
360, 360c, 360e, 360i, 360j, 371, 374, 381,
393; 42 U.S.C. 264, 271.
2. Amend § 807.3 by:
a. Adding ‘‘and’’ at the end of
paragraph (e)(3);
b. Removing ‘‘;and’’ at the end of
paragraph (e)(4) and adding a period in
its place;
c. Removing paragraph (e)(5);
d. Revising paragraph (i);
e. Redesignating paragraphs (k)
through (s) as paragraphs (l) through (t),
respectively; and
f. Adding a new paragraph (k) and
adding paragraphs (u) through (y).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 807.3
Definitions.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Restricted device means a device
for which a requirement restricting sale,
distribution, or use has been established
by a regulation issued under section
520(e) of the act, by order as a condition
of premarket approval under section
515(d)(1)(B)(ii) of the act, or by a
performance standard issued in
accordance with sections 514(a)(2)(B)(v)
and 514(b) of the act.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) Product code means the code used
by FDA to identify the generic category
of a device.
*
*
*
*
*
(u) Fiscal year means the FDA fiscal
year, which runs from October 1
through September 30.
(v) FURLS means the Food and Drug
Administration’s Unified Registration
and Listing System,
(w) FDA premarket submission
number means the number assigned by
FDA to a premarket device submission,
such as a Premarket Approval
Application (PMA); Investigational
Device Exemption (IDE); Humanitarian
Device Exemption (HDE);
Investigational New Drug Application
(IND); New Drug Application (NDA); or
Premarket Notification (510(k)).
(x) Importer means, for purposes of
this part, a company or individual in the
United States that is an owner,
consignee, or recipient, even if not the
initial owner, consignee, or recipient, of
the foreign establishment’s device that
is imported into the United States. An
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13:52 Mar 25, 2010
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importer does not include the consumer
or patient who ultimately purchases,
receives, or uses the device, unless the
foreign establishment ships the device
directly to the consumer or patient.
(y) Person who imports or offers for
import means, for purposes of this part,
an agent, broker, or other entity, other
than a carrier, that the foreign
establishment uses to facilitate the
import of its device into the United
States.
3. Revise § 807.20 to read as follows:
§ 807.20 Who must register and submit a
device list?
(a) An owner or operator of an
establishment not exempt under section
510(g) of the act or subpart D of this part
who is engaged in the manufacture,
preparation, propagation, compounding,
assembly, or processing of a device
intended for human use shall register
and submit listing information for those
devices in commercial distribution,
except that registration and listing
information may be submitted by the
parent, subsidiary, or affiliate company
for all the domestic or foreign
establishments under the control of one
of these organizations when operations
are conducted at more than one
establishment and there exists joint
ownership and control among all the
establishments. The term ‘‘device’’
includes all in vitro diagnostic products
and in vitro diagnostic biological
products not subject to licensing under
section 351 of the Public Health Service
Act. An owner or operator of an
establishment located in any State as
defined in section 201(a)(1) of the act
shall register its name, places of
business, and all establishments and list
the devices whether or not the output of
the establishments or any particular
device so listed enters interstate
commerce. The registration and listing
requirements shall pertain to any person
who:
(1) Initiates or develops specifications
for a device that is to be manufactured
by a second party;
(2) Manufactures a device, including
an establishment that sterilizes or
otherwise makes a device for or on
behalf of a specifications developer or
any other person;
(3) Repackages or relabels a device;
(4) Reprocesses a single use device
that has previously been used on a
patient;
(5) Acts as an initial importer as
defined in § 807.3(g), except that initial
importers are not required to provide
device listings for any device for which
they did not initiate or develop the
specifications for the device or
repackage or relabel the device.
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However, the initial importer shall
submit, for each such device, the name
and address of the manufacturer. Initial
importers shall also be prepared to
submit, when requested by FDA, the
proprietary name, if any, and the
common or usual name of each device
for which they are the initial importer;
(6) Manufactures components or
accessories that are ready to be used for
any intended health-related purpose
and are packaged or labeled for
commercial distribution for such healthrelated purpose, e.g. blood filters,
hemodialysis tubing, or devices which
of necessity must be further processed
by a licensed practitioner or other
qualified person to meet the needs of a
particular patient, e.g., a manufacturer
of ophthalmic lens blanks.
(b) Registration or listing does not
constitute an admission or agreement or
determination that a product is a device
within the meaning of section 201(h) of
the act.
(c) Registration and listing
requirements shall not pertain to any
person who acts as a wholesale
distributor, as defined in § 807.3(t), and
who does not manufacture, repackage,
process, or relabel a device.
(d) Owners and operators of
establishments or persons engaged in
the recovery, screening, testing,
processing, storage, or distribution of
human cells, tissues, and cellular and
tissue-based products, as defined
in§ 1271.3(d) of this chapter, that are
regulated under the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act must register and list
those human cells, tissues, and cellular
and tissue-based products with the
Center for Biologics Evaluation and
Research on Form FDA 3356 following
the procedures set out in subpart B of
part 1271 of this chapter, instead of the
procedures for registration and listing
contained in this part, except that the
additional listing information
requirements of § 807.26 remain
applicable.
(e) Owners and operators of
establishments that manufacture devices
licensed under section 351 of the Public
Health Service Act as well as licensed
biological products used in the
manufacture of a licensed device must
register and list following the
procedures set out in part 607 of this
chapter, instead of the procedures for
registration and listing contained in this
part.
§ 807.22
[Removed]
4. Remove § 807.22.
§ 807.21
[Redesignated as § 807.22]
5. Redesignate § 807.21 as § 807.22.
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6. Add new § 807.21 to subpart B to
read as follows:
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§ 807.21 How to register establishments
and list devices.
(a) Owners or operators of
establishments that are subject to the
registration and listing requirements of
this part must provide the following
information to us using our electronic
device registration and listing system,
except as provided in paragraphs (b),
(c), and (d) of this section:
(1) Initial establishment registration
information as required by §§ 807.22(a)
and 807.25;
(2) Updates to registration information
as required by § 807.22(b) and 807.25;
(3) Initial device listing information as
required by § 807.22(a), 807.25, and
807.28;
(4) Updates to device listing
information as required by § 807.22(b),
807.25, and 807.28, including updates
to reflect the discontinuance or
resumption of the commercial
distribution of a previously-listed
device as specified at paragraphs (d) and
(e) of § 807.28.
(b) If the information under
§ 807.21(a) cannot be submitted
electronically, a waiver may be
requested. Waivers will be granted only
if use of electronic means is not
reasonable for the person requesting the
waiver. To request a waiver, applicants
must send a letter to the Office of
Compliance, Center for Devices and
Radiological Health, Food and Drug
Administration, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Building 66, rm. 2621, Silver
Spring, MD 20993–0002, that includes
the following information:
(1) The name and address of the
device establishment(s) to be registered,
a contact person for the owner or
operator of the establishment, and the
telephone number at which that person
can be reached. If the establishment has
already registered in the past, the letter
should also include the owner or
operator number, registration number,
and any listing numbers previously
assigned by FDA for that establishment.
(2) Information about whether the
company is an initial importer as
defined in § 807.3(g) and, if so, whether
it also conducts any other activities or
operations relating to devices.
(3) A statement that use of the Internet
is not reasonable for the person
requesting the waiver, and an
explanation of why such use is not
reasonable. The statement must be
signed by the owner or operator of the
establishment, or by a person employed
by the owner or operator who is
authorized to make the declaration on
behalf of the owner or operator.
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(c) Those owners or operators who
have obtained a waiver from filing
registration and listing information
electronically should refer to § 807.34
for information on how to submit such
information by postal mail.
(d) When additional device listing
information (e.g., copies of labeling or
advertisements) is requested by FDA as
described at § 807.26(e), such
information may be submitted by postal
mail or electronically by e-mail, but will
not be submitted using the FDA
electronic device registration and listing
system.
7. Revise newly redesignated § 807.22
to read as follows:
§ 807.22 Times for establishment
registration and device listing.
(a) Initial registration and listing. An
owner or operator of an establishment
who has not previously entered into an
operation described in § 807.20(a) shall
register within 30 days after entering
into such an operation and submit
device listing information at that time.
(b) Registration and listing updates.
Owners or operators shall review and
update all of their establishment
registration and device listing
information that is on file at FDA,
documenting any changes that were not
previously reported as follows:
(1) Annual registration for each fiscal
year is required for all establishments.
Annual registration shall take place
during the period beginning on October
1 and ending on December 31 of each
fiscal year;
(2) Updates to the registration
information as described in § 807.25(b)
shall be made within 30 days of any
change to such information;
(3) Every fiscal year, during the period
beginning on October 1 and ending on
December 31, owners or operators shall
review and update all of their device
listing information that is on file at
FDA, reporting any changes or deletions
to listings and any new listings that
were not previously reported. The
accuracy of all information on file must
be confirmed each year regardless of
whether any changes were made to the
owner or operator’s list of devices; and
(4) Changes to listing information may
also be made at other times, such as
when a device is introduced into
commercial distribution, when a change
is made to a previously-listed device, or
when a previously-listed device is
removed from commercial distribution.
(c) Failure to submit any of the
required information on time, as
specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section, will put the establishment
in a ‘‘failed to register’’ or ‘‘failed to list’’
status as applicable. The establishment
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Sfmt 4702
will not be considered active and the
establishment registration and device
listing information will not appear on
the FDA Web site until such time as the
owner or operator submits and FDA
processes the required information.
8. Revise § 807.25 to read as follows:
§ 807.25 Information required for
establishment registration and device
listing.
(a) All owners or operators that are
subject to the registration and listing
requirements of this part shall provide
such information to us by using the FDA
electronic device registration and listing
system, unless granted a waiver from
electronic submission in accordance
with § 807.21(b). Electronic submissions
of registration and listing information
must comply with part 11 of this
chapter, except for the requirements in
§ 11.10(b), (c), and (e), and the
corresponding requirements in § 11.30.
Those owners or operators granted a
waiver from electronic submission
should refer to paragraphs (c) and (g) of
this section and § 807.34 for instructions
on how to submit device registration
and listing information.
(b) Registration information required
to be submitted includes: The name and
mailing address of the device
establishment; the Web site address of
the device establishment, if any; the
name, address, phone number, fax
number, and e-mail address of the
owner or operator; the name, address,
phone number; fax number, and e-mail
address of the establishment’s official
correspondent; and all trade names used
by the establishment.
(c) Owners or operators who have
been granted a waiver from electronic
filing must submit the establishment
registration information described in
paragraph (b) of this section, except for
the Web site and e-mail address
information, in paper form using the
procedures set forth in § 807.34.
(d) Each owner or operator is required
to maintain a listing of all officers,
directors, and partners for each
establishment registered by the owner or
operator and to furnish this information
to FDA upon request.
(e) For each establishment, an official
correspondent must be designated by
the owner or operator to serve as a point
of contact with FDA on matters relating
to the registration of device
establishments and the listing of device
products. Each owner or operator shall
also provide FDA with the name of a
contact person at the owner or
operator’s offices who will be
responsible for identifying the official
correspondent for each establishment.
The owner or operator contact person
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will be the official correspondent in the
event no one else has been properly
designated. The official correspondent
is responsible for:
(1) Providing FDA with all required
registration and listing information
electronically unless a waiver from
electronic submission has been granted
in accordance with § 807.21(b) ;
(2) Receiving all correspondence from
FDA concerning registration and listing;
(3) Supplying, when requested by
FDA, the names of all officers, directors,
and partners; and
(4) Receiving communications from
FDA by e-mail, or by postal mail if the
owner or operator has been granted a
waiver from the requirement to file
registration and listing information
electronically.
(f) The designation of an official
correspondent does not in any manner
affect the liability of the owner or
operator of the establishment or any
other individual under section 301(p) or
any other provision of the act.
(g) Device listing information must be
submitted to FDA electronically unless
a waiver from electronic submission has
been granted in accordance with
§ 807.21(b). Owners or operators who
have been granted a waiver must submit
the required device listing information,
including information required by this
paragraph, § 807.28, and any listing
information requested by FDA under
§ 807.26(e), in paper form using the
procedures set forth in § 807.34. The
information required for each device
listed includes:
(1) The current registration number
and name of each establishment under
the ownership and control of the owner
or operator where the device is
manufactured, repackaged, relabeled, or
otherwise processed, or where
specifications are developed.
(2) The product code for each device
that is exempt from premarket
notification and approval or which was
in commercial distribution prior to May
28, 1976.
(3) The proprietary or brand name(s)
under which each device is marketed.
(4) The FDA-assigned premarket
submission number of the approved
application, cleared premarket
notification, or approved humanitarian
device exemption for each device listed
that is subject to sections 505, 510, 515,
or 520 of the act, which includes
devices that are not exempt from
premarket notification and approval.
(5) Each activity or process that is
conducted on or done to the device at
each establishment, such as
manufacturing, repacking, relabeling,
developing specifications,
remanufacturing, single-use device
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13:52 Mar 25, 2010
Jkt 220001
reprocessing, contract manufacturing,
contract sterilizing, or manufacturing for
export only.
§ 807.26
[Removed and Reserved]
9. Remove and reserve § 807.26.
§ 807.31
[Redesignated as § 807.26]
10. Redesignate § 807.31 as § 807.26.
11. Amend newly redesignated
§ 807.26 by adding paragraph (f) to read
as follows:
§ 807.26
Additional listing information.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Labeling, advertisements, and other
information to be submitted upon
request in accordance with paragraph
(e) of this section may be submitted by
postal mail or electronically by e-mail,
but will not be submitted using the FDA
electronic device registration and listing
system. Electronic submissions of such
information must comply with part 11
of this chapter, except for the
requirements in § 11.10 (a), (c) through
(h), and (k), and the corresponding
requirements in § 11.30. The
information provided in electronic
format must be in a form that we can
process, review, and archive.
§ 807.30
[Redesignated as § 807.28]
12. Redesignate § 807.30 as § 807.28.
13. Revise newly redesignated
§ 807.28 to read as follows:
§ 807.28 Updating device listing
information.
(a) Updating of device listing
information is required when an
additional establishment begins to
engage in any of the activities described
in § 807.3(d) with respect to a listed
device, such as manufacturing,
developing specifications, repackaging,
relabeling, or otherwise processing the
device. Updating of the listing is also
required when an establishment begins
performing another activity on or to the
device, or ceases to perform an activity
on or to the device that had previously
been identified on the device listing.
(b) An owner or operator shall create
a new device listing using the FDA
electronic device registration and listing
system:
(1) When introducing into commercial
distribution an exempt device identified
with a product code that is not currently
listed by the owner or operator; or
(2) When introducing into commercial
distribution a non-exempt device with
an FDA premarket submission number
that is not currently listed by the owner
or operator.
(c) All device listings for foreign
establishments must be submitted
before the device may be imported or
PO 00000
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
14537
offered for import into the United
States.
(d) An owner or operator who
discontinues commercial distribution of
a device shall discontinue the device
listing using the FDA electronic device
registration and listing system. A device
listing is considered discontinued if:
(1) All devices under an exempt
product code have been discontinued or
(2) All devices associated with an
FDA premarket submission number
have been discontinued.
(e) If commercial distribution of a
discontinued device is resumed, the
owner or operator must reactivate the
previously-discontinued listing using
the electronic device registration and
listing system. Any changes to the
listing information for the product that
is the subject of the listing such as a new
establishment, new activity, or new
proprietary name must be made using
the electronic device registration and
listing system at the time the listing is
reactivated.
(f) FDA will assign one listing number
for all devices exempt from premarket
notification requirements under a single
product code. For products not exempt
from premarket notification
requirements, a single listing number
will be assigned by FDA for each FDA
premarket submission number.
14. Add § 807.34 to subpart B to read
as follows:
§ 807.34 Summary of requirements for
owners or operators granted a waiver from
submitting required information
electronically.
(a) For initial registration and listing,
owners or operators who have been
granted a waiver from electronic filing
using the procedures set forth in
§ 807.21(b) must send a letter containing
all of the registration and listing
information described in §§ 807.22,
807.25, (and § 807.26 when such
information is requested by FDA), at the
times described in § 807.22, to: The
Office of Compliance, Center for Devices
and Radiological Health (HFZ–308),
Food and Drug Administration, 10903
New Hampshire Ave., Building 66,
room 3521, Silver Spring, MD 20993–
0002.
(b) As specified in § 807.22(b)(1) and
(b)(3), all owners or operators shall
update their establishment registration
and device listings annually during the
period beginning on October 1 and
ending on December 31 of each fiscal
year.
(c) Failure to submit any of the
required information on time, as
specified in § 807.22(a) and (b), will put
the establishment in a ‘‘failed to register’’
or ‘‘failed to list’’ status as applicable.
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The establishment will not be
considered active and the establishment
registration and device listing
information will not appear on the FDA
Web site until the required information
is submitted to and processed by FDA.
15. Amend § 807.35 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as follows:
registration number or location of a
registered establishment will be
provided.
17. The heading of subpart C is
revised to read as set forth below:
§ 807.35
18. Amend § 807.40 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (c) and by adding
paragraph (d) to read as follows:
Notification of registrant.
(a) FDA will assign each device
establishment a permanent registration
number after verifying the initial
establishment registration information
that has been submitted. The owner or
operator of the establishment will also
be assigned an identifying number. Both
numbers will be sent to the official
correspondent by e-mail, or by postal
mail if the owner or operator has been
granted a waiver from the requirement
to file registration and listing
information electronically.
(b) Owners or operators of device
establishments who also manufacture or
process biological products (including
devices licensed under section 351 of
the Public Health Service Act) or drug
products at the same establishment
must also register and list those
products under part 607 or part 207 of
this chapter, as appropriate. Registration
and listing for human blood and blood
products, devices licensed under
section 351 of the Public Health Service
Act, and licensed biological products
used in the manufacture of a device
licensed under section 351 of the Public
Health Service Act, are subject to part
607 of this chapter; registration and
listing for all other drug products
(including other biological products that
are also regulated as drug products) are
subject to part 207 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
16. Revise § 807.37 to read as follows:
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 807.37 Public availability of
establishment registration and device
listing information.
Establishment registration and device
listing information is available for
public inspection in accordance with
section 510(f) of the act and will be
posted on the FDA Web site. Requests
for information by persons who do not
have access to the Internet should be
directed to the Office of Compliance,
Center for Devices and Radiological
Health (HFZ–308), Food and Drug
Administration, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Building 66, rm. 3521, Silver
spring, MD 20993–0002. In addition,
there will be available for inspection at
each of the Food and Drug
Administration district offices the same
information for firms within the
geographical area of such district
offices. Upon request, verification of a
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13:52 Mar 25, 2010
Jkt 220001
Subpart C—Procedures for Foreign
Device Establishments
§ 807.40 Establishment registration and
device listing for foreign establishments
importing or offering for import devices into
the United States.
(a) Any establishment within any
foreign country engaged in the
manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, or processing of a device
that is imported or offered for import
into the United States shall register such
establishment and list such devices
using the FDA electronic device
registration and listing system in
conformance with the procedures in this
section, § 807.41, and subpart B of this
part. The official correspondent for the
foreign establishment shall facilitate
communication between the foreign
establishment’s management and
representatives of the Food and Drug
Administration for matters relating to
the registration of device establishments
and the listing of device products.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) No device may be imported or
offered for import into the United States
unless it is the subject of a device listing
as required under subpart B of this part
and is manufactured, prepared,
propagated, compounded, or processed
at a registered foreign establishment;
however, this restriction does not apply
to devices imported or offered for
import under the investigational use
provisions of part 812 of this chapter.
(d) The establishment registration and
device listing information shall be in the
English language.
19. Add § 807.41 to subpart C to read
as follows:
§ 807.41 Identification of importers and
persons who import or offer for import.
(a) Upon initial registration, annually,
and at the time of any changes, each
foreign establishment required to
register and list as provided in
§ 807.40(a) must, using the FDA
electronic device registration and listing
system, submit the name, address,
telephone and fax numbers, e-mail
address, and registration number, if any
has been assigned, of any importer
(defined in § 807.3(x)) of the
establishment’s devices that is known to
the foreign establishment. The foreign
establishment must also specify which
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
of the establishment’s listed products
each importer receives from the foreign
establishment.
(b) Upon initial registration, annually,
and at the time of any changes, each
foreign establishment required to
register and list as provided in
§ 807.40(a) must, using the FDA
electronic device registration and listing
system, submit the name, address,
telephone and fax numbers, e-mail
address, and registration number, if any
has been assigned, of each person who
imports or offers for import the
establishment’s devices into the United
States. The term ‘‘person who imports or
offers for import,’’ which is defined in
§ 807.3(y), includes agents, brokers, or
other parties used by the foreign
establishment to facilitate the import of
its device into the United States.
(c) For each individual or
organization identified by the foreign
establishment under paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section, the foreign
establishment must submit to FDA
electronically the current FDA
premarket submission number (e.g.,
PMA, 510(k), HDE, NDA) and any other
identifying information that is known to
the establishment for each device being
imported or offered for import by the
named individuals or organizations.
Dated: March 22, 2010.
Leslie Kux,
Acting Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2010–6662 Filed 3–25–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–S
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
21 CFR Part 1308
[Docket No. DEA–333]
Schedules of Controlled Substances:
Placement of Carisoprodol Into
Schedule IV; Announcement of
Hearing
AGENCY: Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA), Department of
Justice.
ACTION: Notice of hearing on proposed
rulemaking.
SUMMARY: This is notice that the Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA) will
hold a hearing with respect to the
proposed placement of carisoprodol in
schedule IV of the Controlled
Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 801, et seq.).
The control of carisoprodol was initially
proposed in a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking published in the Federal
E:\FR\FM\26MRP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 58 (Friday, March 26, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 14510-14538]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-6662]
[[Page 14510]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Part 807
[Docket No. FDA-2009-N-0114]
RIN 0910-AF88
Implementation of Device Registration and Listing Requirements
Enacted in the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and
Response Act of 2002, the Medical Device User Fee and Modernization Act
of 2002, and Title II of the Food and Drug Administration Amendments
Act of 2007
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration is proposing to amend its
regulations governing medical device establishment registration and
device listing. The proposed revisions would modify FDA's current
regulations at part 807 (21 CFR part 807) to reflect recent statutory
amendments to the device registration and listing provisions of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act). The Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of 2007 (FDAAA), which was enacted on
September 27, 2007, amended section 510 of the FD&C Act by requiring
domestic and foreign device establishments to begin submitting their
registration and device listing information to FDA by electronic means
rather than on paper forms, and also specified the timeframes when
establishments are required to submit such information. In accordance
with FDAAA, the agency launched FDA's Unified Registration and Listing
System (FURLS), and Internet-based registration and listing system.
FDAAA requires electronic submission of device registration and listing
information unless FDA grants a waiver request.
In addition, this proposal would facilitate FDA's collection of
additional registration information from foreign establishments as
required by the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness
and Response Act of 2002 (Bioterrorism Act). It also would update
certain provisions in part 807 to improve the quality of registration
and listing information available to FDA. FDA relies on having complete
and accurate registration and listing information in order to
accomplish a number of important public health objectives.
DATES: Submit written or electronic comments on the proposed rule by
June 24, 2010. Submit comments on information collection issues under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 by April 26, 2010, (see the
``Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995'' section of this document). See
sections IX and X of this document for the proposed effective and
proposed compliance dates of a final rule based on this document.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. FDA-2009-
N-0114 and RIN number 0910-AF88, by any of the following methods,
except that comments on information collection issues under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 must be submitted to the Office of
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget (OMB) at FAX: 202-
395-7285, or e-mail comments to OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov. Please
mark your comments to the attention of the FDA desk officer and
reference this rule.
Electronic Submissions
Submit electronic comments in the following way:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Written Submissions
Submit written submissions in the following ways:
FAX: 301-827-6870.
Mail/Hand delivery/Courier [For paper, disk, or CD-ROM
submissions]: Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305), Food and Drug
Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and Docket No(s). and Regulatory Information Number (RIN) (if a RIN
number has been assigned) for this rulemaking. All comments received
may be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided. For additional information on
submitting comments, see the ``Comments'' heading of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov and insert the
docket number found in brackets in the heading of this document into
the ``Search'' box and follow the prompts and/or go to the Division of
Dockets Management, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Theresa McDonald, Center for Devices
and Radiological Health (HFZ-307), Food and Drug Administration, 10903
New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002, 301-796-5823.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Summary of Current Registration and Listing Requirements
A. Summary of Section 510 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360)
B. Summary of Current Registration and Listing Regulations
III. Highlights of the Proposed Changes to the Current Registration and
Listing Requirements
IV. Description of the Proposed Rule
A. General
B. Registration
C. Listing
D. Electronic Format
E. Miscellaneous
F. Conforming Actions
V. Legal Authority
VI. Analysis of Economic Impacts
A. The Need for Regulation
B. Background
C. The Proposed Regulation
D. Estimated Impacts
E. Impact on Small Entities
VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
A. Statutory Compliance
B. Transition Process From Paper to Electronic Submission
VIII. Environmental Impact
IX. Proposed Effective Date
X. Proposed Compliance Dates
XI. Federalism
XII. Request for Comments
XIII. References
I. Background
We originally published establishment registration regulations for
medical devices in the Federal Register of September 3, 1976 (41 FR
37458) (proposed rule) and August 23, 1977 (42 FR 42520) (final rule),
and device listing regulations in the Federal Register of September 30,
1977 (42 FR 52808) (proposed rule), and August 25, 1978 (43 FR 37990)
(final rule).
These regulations called for establishment registration and device
listing information to be submitted to the Center for Devices and
Radiological Health (CDRH) on several paper forms: FDA 2891,
Registration of Device Establishment; FDA 2891a, Annual Registration of
Device Establishment; and FDA 2892, Device Listing. Once these forms
were completed and submitted to FDA, FDA then forwarded them to a data
entry contractor who entered the information into FDA's device
registration and listing database.
In June 2002, section 321 of the Bioterrorism Act amended section
510(i) of the FD&C Act to require those foreign
[[Page 14511]]
establishments who are required to register with FDA to do so by
electronic means, and to include additional information identifying
certain parties involved in the importation of the foreign
establishment's devices into the United States as part of their
registration. Subsequently, in October 2002, section 207 of MDUFMA
further amended section 510 of the FD&C Act by extending the
requirement for electronic submission of registration information to
include domestic firms as well as foreign firms. However, when adding
these new electronic submission requirements, which appear in section
510(p) of the FD&C Act, Congress chose to delay their implementation so
that FDA would have an opportunity to first put systems in place to
accommodate the electronic receipt of registration information. This
was accomplished by including a requirement in section 510(p) of the
FD&C Act for the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services (the Secretary) to make a finding that the electronic receipt
of registration information was feasible before implementing electronic
registration.
As reflected in FDAAA, the most recent legislation establishing
changes to FDA's device registration and listing program, FDA has now
developed a system that makes the electronic receipt of device
registration and listing information feasible. FDAAA amended section
510(p) of the FD&C Act by eliminating the need for a feasibility
finding and requiring both establishment registration and device
listing information to be submitted using electronic means unless FDA
grants a waiver request. In accordance with FDAAA, FDA's Unified
Registration and Listing System (FURLS), which is a new Internet-based
system, became operational on October 1, 2007. FDA believes this
electronic system will ultimately make the process of submitting
registration and listing information more efficient for industry and
will provide faster access to this information for both FDA and
industry.
In addition, the new electronic system will allow FDA to more
effectively gather information concerning marketed devices. We rely on
having complete and accurate registration and listing information to
accomplish a number of important statutory and regulatory objectives.
For example, we use registration and listing information to:
Identify establishments producing marketed medical
devices;
Identify establishments producing a specific device when
that device is in short supply or is needed for a national emergency.
This information helps us facilitate prompt shipment of devices to the
places where they are needed most. For example, during a bioterrorism
incident, we could use device listing information to identify
establishments that could be helpful in preventing or counteracting the
deadly effects of biological weapons; with this information, we could
facilitate prompt shipment of the devices as needed;
Facilitate the recall of devices marketed by owners or
operators of device establishments;
Identify and catalogue marketed devices;
Administer our postmarketing surveillance programs for
devices;
Identify devices marketed in violation of the law;
Identify and control devices imported or offered for
import into the country from foreign establishments; and
Schedule and plan inspections of registered establishments
under section 704 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 374).
We also rely on registration and listing information to help us
comply with several other statutory provisions. For example, we use
this information to generate accurate estimates of the number of
businesses that are affected by our rulemaking activities. These
estimates help us assess the impact of our regulations on regulated
industry, which we are required to do under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act of 1980 (Public Law 96-354) (5 U.S.C. 601-612), as amended by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (Title II of
Public Law 104-121); the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public
Law 104-4) (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.); the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(the PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520); Executive Order 12866 (September 30,
1993); and the Congressional Review Act (section 251 of Public Law 104-
121).
Registration and listing information will continue to be used for
all of the important public health purposes outlined previously. The
electronic submission of registration and listing information allows us
to use such information more quickly and effectively to carry out all
of the activities described previously.
In addition, electronic submission of registration and listing
information furthers the purpose of the Government Paperwork
Elimination Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-277, Title XVII) (GPEA). GPEA
requires Federal agencies to give persons who are required to maintain,
submit, or disclose information, the option of doing so electronically
when practicable as a substitute for paper, and to use electronic
authentication (electronic signature) methods to verify the identity of
the sender and the integrity of the electronic content. We believe that
electronic submission of registration and listing information furthers
the purpose of this law and makes the registration and listing
processes more efficient and effective both for industry and us.
II. Summary of Current Registration and Listing Requirements
A. Summary of Section 510 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360)
Section 510 of the FD&C Act contains the statutory requirements
pertaining to device registration and listing. Section 510(b), (c), and
(d) of the FD&C Act address registration obligations that apply to
domestic establishments. Section 510(c) of the FD&C Act includes the
requirement for owners or operators to immediately register their
establishment ``upon first engaging in the manufacture, preparation,
propagation, compounding, or processing of * * * device or devices.''
As clarified in section 510(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, the term
``manufacture, preparation, propagation, compounding, or processing''
as used in section 510 is intended to be rather broad and also includes
``repackaging or otherwise changing the container, wrapper, or labeling
of any * * * device package in furtherance of the distribution of the *
* * device from the original place of manufacture to the person who
makes final delivery or sale to the ultimate consumer or user.''
In addition to the initial registration requirement in section
510(c), owners or operators of domestic device establishments are also
required to renew their registrations on an annual basis. Prior to
FDAAA, section 510(b) provided that such registration had to be
completed ``[o]n or before December 31 of each year.'' FDAAA amended
the timeframes in section 510(b) and now requires annual registration
to be performed during the 3-month period beginning on October 1 and
ending on December 31 of each year.
Section 510(d) of the FD&C Act requires an owner or operator that
has previously registered an establishment to immediately update his
registration information on file with the agency to include any
additional establishment that he owns or operates in which he begins
the ``manufacture, preparation, propagation, compounding, or
processing'' of a device or devices.
Section 510(i) of the FD&C Act contains certain registration and
listing requirements that specifically pertain to
[[Page 14512]]
foreign establishments. The owner or operator of a foreign
establishment has to register and list with FDA if the establishment is
engaged in the ``manufacture, preparation, propagation, compounding, or
processing of * * * a device that is imported or offered for import
into the United States.'' Section 510(i) specifies that the
registration and listing information must be submitted to FDA by
electronic means, and also requires the foreign establishments to
furnish, as part of their registration, ``the name of each importer of
[the establishment's] device in the United States that is known to the
establishment, and the name of each person who imports or offers for
import such * * * device to the United States for purposes of
importation.'' Prior to the passage of FDAAA, section 510(i) required
foreign establishments to complete their annual registration ``[o]n or
before December 31 of each year.'' FDAAA amended the timeframes in
section 510(i) and now requires annual registration to be performed
during the 3-month period beginning on October 1 and ending on December
31 of each year.
Section 510(g) of the FD&C Act establishes specific exemptions from
registration requirements and permits the Secretary, under section
510(g)(5), to create additional exemptions by regulation where the
Secretary finds that registration by those persons is not necessary for
the protection of public health.
Under section 510(e) of the FD&C Act, we may assign a registration
number to any person or establishment who registers. We may also
prescribe a uniform system for the identification of devices intended
for human use and require that persons who are required to list their
devices do so in accordance with such a system.
Section 510(f) of the FD&C Act is the provision governing the
public availability of registration and listing information that has
been submitted to FDA in accordance with section 510.
Section 510(j) of the FD&C Act prescribes the requirements for
device listing. Section 510(j)(1) requires every person who registers
to file, at the time of registration, a list of all devices that are
being ``manufactured, prepared, propagated, compounded, or processed by
him for commercial distribution'' and which have not been previously
listed by him or her. Section 510(j)(1) further requires that the
listing information be prepared and submitted in the ``form and manner
prescribed by the Secretary.'' Section 510(j)(2) of the FD&C Act
requires registrants to periodically update their listing information.
Prior to the passage of FDAAA, registrants were required to update
their device listings two times each year, once in June and once in
December. As amended by FDAAA, section 510(j)(2) now requires device
listing information to be updated only once each year during the period
beginning on October 1 and ending on December 31, which is the same 3-
month period during which establishments are required to complete their
annual registration.
Section 510(p) of the FD&C Act, as amended by FDAAA, requires the
electronic submission of device registration and listing information
unless the Secretary grants a request for a waiver because use of
electronic means is not reasonable for the person requesting the
waiver.
On October 8, 2009, FDA published the document ``Guidance for
Industry and FDA Staff--Implementation of Medical Device Establishment
Registration and Device Listing Requirements Established by the Food
and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007.'' The purpose of the
Guidance is to explain changes in the device registration and listing
program that are required by Section 207 of the Medical Device User Fee
and Modernization Act of 2002 and the Food and Drug Administration
Amendments Act of 2007. Copies of the guidance can be found on the
Internet at: https://www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/DeviceRegulationandGuidance/GuidanceDocuments/ucm185871.htm.
B. Summary of Current Registration and Listing Regulations
1. Who Must Register and List Under the Current Regulations?
Under current part 807 (21 CFR part 807) of FDA's regulations, with
certain exceptions, owners or operators of establishments that engage
in the manufacture, preparation, propagation, compounding, assembly, or
processing of a device intended for human use must, in addition to
other requirements, register their establishments and submit listing
information for each of their devices in commercial distribution. FDA
has interpreted the types of establishments that must register and/or
list to include, among others, manufacturers, contract manufacturers
and contract sterilizers (currently required to register and list only
if they also distribute the device commercially on behalf of the party
initiating the specifications), specification developers,
remanufactures, repackages, re labelers, single-use device (SUD)
preprocessors, and initial importers (these parties are currently
required to register but need not submit listing information). Foreign
device establishments that manufacture, prepare, propagate, compound,
process or export a device that is imported or offered for import into
the United States also must comply with the registration and listing
requirements, including the requirement to identify a U.S. agent. The
current regulations provide for all registration and listing
information to be submitted to us using paper forms FDA 2891,
Registration of Device Establishment; FDA 2891a, Annual Registration of
Device Establishment; and FDA 2892, Device Listing, as required by
Sec. 807.22.
2. What Are the Registration Requirements Under the Current
Regulations?
The existing regulations in part 807 contain various provisions
governing the requirements for registration. Among others, those
provisions include the following:
Section 807.21(a) requires owners or operators of
establishments entering into the manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, assembly, or processing of a device or devices to register
their establishment within 30 days after beginning such an activity at
their establishment.
Sections 807.25 and 807.40 describe the information
required to be submitted by owners or operators of domestic and foreign
establishments as part of their registration. This information
includes:
The names of the registered establishment, its owner or
operator, and its official correspondent;
Contact information for the official correspondent;
Trade names used by the establishment;
The types of operations or activities conducted at the
establishment; and
The name and contact information for their designated U.S.
agent (applies only to foreign establishments).
Section 807.21(a) requires owners or operators to renew
their establishment's registration on an annual basis in accordance
with a schedule specified in the regulations.
Section 807.35 provides for FDA to assign a permanent
registration number to each establishment after reviewing the
information provided to us on Form FDA 2891 at the time of the
establishment's initial registration.
3. What Are the Listing Requirements Under the Current Regulations?
The listing provisions currently found in part 807 include, among
others, the following:
[[Page 14513]]
Owners or operators of establishments must, at the time of
registration, submit a list of devices being manufactured or processed
at the establishment that are in commercial distribution at that time
using forms) FDA 2892 (Sec. 807.21(a)).
The device listing information required to be submitted to
us under Sec. 807.25(f) includes, but is not limited to the
classification name and number for the device (in practice, the product
code assigned to the device by FDA is ordinarily provided rather than
the classification name and number); the proprietary and common names
associated with the device; the name and FDA-assigned identification
number of the owner or operator; the name, registration number, and
establishment type of all establishments under the joint ownership and
control of the owner or operator at which the device is manufactured,
repackaged, or re labeled; the number assigned by FDA to an approved
application for each device listed that is subject to pre market review
under section 505 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 355) or section 515 of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 360e) (in practice, the owners and operators are
also providing 510(k) clearance and Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE)
numbers); the reason for the submission (e.g., represents a new device
listing, an update to an existing listing, or the device is being
discontinued); and if the listing relates to a previously listed
device, as in the case of an update, the initial listing number for the
device.
The current regulations at Sec. 807.30(b) require owners
or operators to update their device listing information twice each year
during June and December, or at their discretion, at the time the
change occurs. Updated information must include, but need not be
limited to:
A list of each device introduced by the registrant for
commercial distribution that has not been included in any previously-
submitted list;
All previously-listed devices for which commercial
distribution has been discontinued;
A list of all devices for which a notice of discontinuance
was submitted and for which commercial distribution has since that time
been resumed; and
Information about any other material change to listed
products, as required under current Sec. 807.30(b).
4. Who Is Not Covered by Registration and Listing Requirements Under
the Current Regulation?
Under the current regulations, certain establishments are exempt
from the registration and listing requirements set forth in part 807.
Section 510(g) of the FD&C Act, which establishes certain exemptions
from registration requirements, authorized FDA to exempt additional
classes of persons from registration requirements by regulation when we
determine that registration by those persons is not necessary for the
protection of the public health. (21 U.S.C. 360(g)). These exemptions
are reflected in our regulations at Sec. 807.65. Section 807.65
provides an exemption from registration requirements for the following
types of establishments:
A manufacturer of raw materials or components;
A manufacturer of veterinary devices;
A manufacturer of common and widely-used laboratory
equipment and/or chemical reagents not labeled or promoted for medical
use; and
Carriers whose business it is to transport and deliver
devices.
Section 807.65 further exempts from registration requirements the
following types of establishments, provided they are domestic
establishments:
Licensed practitioners, including physicians, dentists,
and optometrists, who manufacture or otherwise alter devices solely for
use in their professional practice;
Persons who manufacture, prepare, propagate, compound or
process devices solely for use in research, teaching, or analysis, and
do not introduce such devices into commercial distribution;
Pharmacies, surgical supply outlets, or other similar
retail establishments making final delivery or sale to the ultimate
user; and
Persons who dispense previously-manufactured devices or
render services to the ultimate consumer (i.e., patient, physician,
layman, etc.), such as a hearing aid dispenser, optician, clinical
laboratory, assembler of diagnostic x-ray systems, as well as personnel
from a hospital, clinic, dental laboratory, orthoepic or prosthetic
retail facility whose primary responsibility to the ultimate consumer
is to dispense or provide a service through the use of a previously
manufactured device.
Additionally, under current Sec. 807.20(c), establishment
registration and device listing requirements do not apply to any person
who:
Manufactures the device for another party who initiated
the specifications and distributes the device;
Sterilizes the device on a contract basis for another
party who distributes the device; or
Acts only as a wholesale distributor and does not
manufacture, repackage, process, or re label the device.
5. Do the Current Regulations Permit the Disclosure of Registration and
Listing Information?
Section 807.37 of the current regulations addresses the extent to
which registration and listing information submitted to us will be
available for public disclosure and the procedure for obtaining access
to such information. Specifically, that provision states that all
registration information submitted by an establishment on forms FDA
2891 and FDA 2891a will be made available for inspection at the CDRH
Office of Compliance in Maryland and also at the district office that
has responsibility for that establishment. In practice, these documents
are no longer kept at the district offices, but can still be requested
from the Office of Compliance. Registration data also can be searched
and downloaded from CDRH's Web site at www.fda.gov/cdrh.
Device listing information submitted on Form FDA 2892 may also be
requested as specified in current Sec. 807.37(b). Listing information
can also be searched and downloaded from CDRH's Web site. The search
and download capabilities of the Web-based database is the method of
obtaining registration and listing data that is most often used by the
public.
III. Highlights of the Proposed Changes to the Current Registration and
Listing Requirements
This proposal would modify the current registration and listing
regulations to reflect FDAAA's mandate that device registration and
listing be submitted electronically and to facilitate the government's
collection of additional registration information as mandated by the
Bioterrorism Act. It also would revise certain registration and listing
provisions to improve the quality of registration and listing
information that will be available to FDA for use in pursuing its
important health objectives.
Proposed Changes to the Current Registration and Listing Regulations
We are proposing the following changes to the current registration
and listing regulations:
1. Switch to an Electronic Registration and Listing System
The current regulations in part 807 require owners and operators of
device establishments to submit their registration and listing
information to FDA using paper forms (Forms FDA 2891, FDA 2891a, and
FDA 2892). This proposal would update the regulations to conform to the
requirement in section 510(p) of the FD&C Act, as amended by
[[Page 14514]]
FDAAA, that such information be provided to FDA electronically unless
FDA grants a request for a waiver.
As part of the new electronic registration and listing system, each
owner or operator establish an account using the FURLS, from which the
owner or operator creates and updates his or her establishment
registration and device listing information. Information submitted to
FDA prior to September 15, 2007, has already been migrated to the new
electronic database and thus there is no need for owners or operators
to reenter this information.
In accordance with section 510 of the FD&C Act, as amended by
sections 222 through 224 of FDAAA, device establishment owners and
operators have been using FURLS to submit their establishment
registration and device listing information electronically since the
system became operational on October 1, 2007. In addition, in
accordance with section 510(p), as amended by FDAAA section 224, FDA is
granting waivers from the new electronic submission requirements only
to those owners or operators for whom electronic registration and
listing is not reasonable.
2. Foreign Establishment Registration and Listing Requirements of the
Bioterrorism Act
Before its devices will be allowed into the United States, each
foreign establishment that is required to register must supply to FDA
the registration information required by part 807, including the name
and contact information for its U.S. agent. Section 321 of the
Bioterrorism Act affected foreign establishment registration in part by
amending section 510(i) of the FD&C Act to require, as part of an
establishment's registration, the name of each importer of the device
that is known to the establishment and the name of each person who
imports or offers to import the device into the United States. This
proposal would amend part 807 to reflect in our regulations the
Bioterrorism Act requirement that foreign establishments whose devices
are imported or offered for import into the United States must
identify: (1) All importers known to the foreign establishment and (2)
the name of each person who imports or offers to import the foreign
establishment's device into the United States. Proposed changes to
Sec. 807.3 also would add specific definitions for these two new
categories of information that need to be submitted by foreign
establishments.
On August 29, 2006, FDA issued a proposed rule (71 FR 51276)
relating to drugs (including certain blood products) which proposed to
revoke exemptions from registration and listing requirements found in
Sec. Sec. 207.40(a) and 607.40(a) (21 CFR 207.40(a) and 607.40(a))
relating to foreign establishments whose drug products enter a foreign
trade zone and are then re-exported from the foreign trade zone without
having entered U.S. commerce. The same rule also proposed to revoke
exemptions in Sec. Sec. 207.40(b) and 607.40(b) which allow a
component of a drug imported under section 801(d)(3) of the FD&Act (or
a blood product imported under section 801(d)(4) of the FD&C Act) to be
imported or offered for import into the United States even if the
component is not listed and manufactured, prepared, propagated,
compounded, or processed at a registered foreign establishment. (21
U.S.C. 381(d)(3) and (d)(4)).
Consistent with the revisions proposed to Sec. Sec. 207.40 and
607.40, and for the reasons discussed in that rule (see 71 FR 51283-
51284 and 51324), we are proposing to eliminate the exemption in Sec.
807.40(a) for foreign establishments whose devices enter a foreign
trade zone and are re-exported from the foreign trade zone without
entering U.S. commerce, and the exemption in Sec. 807.40(c) for
devices that are imported under section 801(d)(3) of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 381(d)(3)). We believe that removing the exemptions from
registration and listing requirements for devices entering foreign
trade zones and for products imported under section 801(d)(3) of the
Act is consistent with Congress' desire, as reflected in the
Bioterrorism Act, to increase the Nation's ability to prepare for and
effectively respond to bioterrorism and other public health emergencies
by requiring foreign establishments to provide more, rather than less,
information for imported products.
3. Change in Requirements Relating to Contract Manufacturers and
Sterilizers
The proposed regulation would amend current part 807 regarding the
applicability of registration and listing requirements to contract
manufacturers and contract sterilizers. Under the proposed regulation,
all contract manufacturers and sterilizers would be required to
register their establishment and list their devices. Currently Sec.
807.20(a)(2) states that contract manufacturers who do not put the
device into commercial distribution do not have to list those devices.
In addition, Sec. 807.20(c)(1) and (c)(2) currently provide that
contract manufacturers and sterilizers who do not put a device into
commercial distribution do not have to register or list. These two
provisions, taken together, have been interpreted as requiring contract
manufacturers and sterilizers to register and list only if they
distribute the device commercially on behalf of the person initiating
the specifications.
FDA relies on having a complete and accurate registration of device
establishments and the devices processed at those establishments in
order to accomplish a number of important statutory and regulatory
objectives. FDA's recent experience with contract manufacturers and
contract sterilizers since October 1, 2007, suggests that many of these
firms that have voluntarily registered and listed in the past, no
longer do so. When such establishments experience a problem, it can
have significant impact on the product lines for the one or multiple
firms for which it is contracted to provide manufacturing or
sterilization services. Knowing which products are manufactured or
sterilized at the affected site could facilitate the recall of the
impacted devices. FDA also believes that knowing that these
manufacturing sites exist would be critical information when a device
is in short supply or needed in the event of a national emergency.
We are proposing to modify Sec. 807.20(a)(2) and delete Sec.
807.20(c)(1) and (c)(2) such that all contract manufacturers and
contract sterilizers would be required to register their establishments
and list their devices regardless of whether they put the device in
commercial distribution.
4. Requiring Submission of the FDA Product Code Assigned to a Device
Rather Than the Classification Name and Number
Current Sec. 807.25(f)(1) indicates that when listing their
devices, registrants need to provide, among other information, the
classification name and number of each device. The new electronic
system would require exempt devices to be identified by product code
rather than by classification name and number. The product code is
already requested for such devices. This change to the regulation,
therefore, is intended to codify the existing practice.
5. Requiring Submission of the 510(k) or HDE Number for Non-Exempt
Device Listings
Current Sec. 807.25(f)(3) requires owners or operators to provide
as part of their device listing information the premarket submission
number assigned by FDA under section 505 or 515 of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 360j) for approved
[[Page 14515]]
devices. FDA also has been requesting owners or operators to identify
as part of their device listing information the assigned premarket
notification number for a device cleared under section 510(k) of the
FD&C Act (i.e., the 510(k) number) or the assigned HDE number for a
device approved for marketing under section 520(m) of the FD&C Act.
This proposal amends Sec. 807.25(f)(3) (at proposed Sec.
807.25(g)(4)) to include 510(k) numbers and HDE numbers among the types
of premarket submission numbers required to be provided as part of the
listing information submitted to FDA for non-exempt devices.
Collection of the premarket submission numbers allows FDA to better
protect the public health by providing a mechanism FDA can use to
follow the total product life cycle of non-exempt medical devices.
Having access to this information through the listing process also
facilitates the agency's use of information that was collected during
premarket review to identify devices by attributes other than the
product code that is assigned to the product. This would include
information such as whether the device contains materials from animal
sources, is an implanted device, and other information that generally
is not collected as part of the device listing.
Until FDA began collecting the 510(k) number, it was difficult to
determine which products listed under registration and listing
requirements were being marketed under a specific premarket
notification clearance. At times, the product code assigned to a device
during the premarket notification clearance process was not accurately
identified when the device was listed. This meant that a device
assigned one product code during the 510(k) review process could
ultimately be listed with FDA under a different product code once the
device was put in commercial distribution.
This lack of a direct link between products on the market and their
premarket filings made it difficult for FDA to know which devices that
we had cleared were being marketed, and where the devices were being
marketed. This change would allow us to better identify, evaluate, and
resolve potential problems with marketed devices when public health
concerns arise.
Proposed Sec. 807.25(g)(4) would codify the practice of including
the 510(k) number when listing a medical device that has gone through
premarket clearance or the approved HDE number in the electronic device
registration and listing system. This change also would provide FDA
with a tool to help ensure that devices that lack a required premarket
clearance or premarket approval are not marketed.
6. Identification of a Contact Person to Administer the Electronic
System Accounts
Prior to the implementation of FURLS, each owner or operator
identified an official correspondent on Forms FDA 2891 and FDA 2891a.
The official correspondent was the only person who could supply, delete
or change information related to a device establishment and its
listings. As a result of the passage of FDAAA, FDA began collecting
device registration and listing information using FURLS beginning in
October 2007. When using FURLS, an owner or operator needs to identify
not only an official correspondent for the establishment but also a
contact person for the owner or operator. The contact person is the
only person who can administer the owner or operator's user accounts in
FURLS.
In instances where owners or operators have only one establishment,
they may choose the same person to serve as both the contact person for
the user account and the official correspondent for the establishment.
For owners or operators with multiple establishments, the contact
person for the owner or operator may also serve as the official
correspondent for any or all of the owner or operator's establishments.
Alternatively, using the accounts management software for FURLS, the
owner or operator may create subaccounts in which different official
correspondents are identified for each establishment.
Proper control of access to accounts and control of the ability to
update an establishment's online information is necessary to avoid
errors. Therefore, we are proposing that each owner or operator
identify only one contact person within the owner or operator's
organization who will be responsible for creating the master account in
FURLS for the owner or operator and assigning subaccounts to each
establishment, if needed. Once the contact person creates the master
account and any needed subaccounts, the official correspondent can then
use the accounts to submit the owner or operator's establishment
registration and device listing information to FDA.
7. Establishment Operations Will Be Reported Through Device Listing
Currently, owners or operators are required to identify the
operations or activities that they conduct at their establishments as
part of the registration information required on Forms FDA 2891 and FDA
2891a and also as part of the listing information required on Form FDA
2892. Under the proposed rule, we would require owners or operators to
identify the operations or activities their establishments engage in
only as part of their device listings. This is because the new
electronic system has been designed to automatically migrate the
information provided in the device listing to the owner or operator's
registration, thus saving the owner or operator from having to provide
the same information twice. Because under the new system owners or
operators would only have to supply such information once, this change
will save time and help avoid inconsistencies between the registration
and listing information for a single establishment.
8. Registration Fees
FDAAA section 212 requires that certain medical device
establishments pay a registration user fee when they initially register
with us and for each annual registration thereafter. Therefore, we are
deleting the sentence at the beginning of Sec. 807.20(b) that states,
``No registration or listing fee is required.''
9. Definition of Restricted Devices
This proposal also would revise the definition of ``restricted
device'' in Sec. 807.3(i) to more accurately reflect the provisions of
the FD&C Act that provide us with authority to restrict devices.
IV. Description of the Proposed Rule
We are proposing to amend our establishment registration and device
listing regulations in part 807 in order to implement changes that are
required by FDAAA, section 321 of the Bioterrorism Act, and section 207
of MDUFMA.
As a result, in this proposal we have revised and re-codified some
provisions, added new provisions, and eliminated others. The following
discussion of the proposed rule describes the new provisions we would
add to part 807 and also the changes we would make to the existing
provisions.
A. General
1. What Is the Purpose of the Proposed Changes to Part 807?
Changes we are proposing to the current registration and listing
requirements are intended to:
Improve the accuracy and availability of postmarket
medical device information;
Make submission of the information required by the
registration and listing provisions of part 807 easier and faster;
Comply with the Bioterrorism Act and MDUFMA by
implementing an
[[Page 14516]]
electronic registration and listing system;
Comply with the additional information collection
requirements of the Bioterrorism Act;
Eliminate ambiguity and clarify requirements in the
current device registration and listing regulations; and
Link postmarket listing data collection with related
premarket data by collecting premarket review numbers assigned by FDA.
2. Who Would Be Affected by the Proposed Changes to Part 807?
The proposed changes to part 807 would impact all device
establishments that are required to register their establishments and
list their devices with FDA; however, the revised regulation would have
the greatest impact on contract manufacturers, contract sterilizers,
and foreign establishments.
a. Contract manufacturers and sterilizers. The proposed rule would
require that all contract manufacturers and contract sterilizers
register their establishments and list their devices. Currently, there
are two provisions, Sec. 807.20(a)(2) and (c), that address the
registration and listing requirements for contract manufacturers and
contract sterilizers. Current Sec. 807.20(a)(2) states: ``* * * person
who only manufactures devices according to another person's
specifications, for commercial distribution by the person initiating
specifications, is not required to list those devices.'' Current Sec.
807.20(c) states: ``Registration and listing requirements shall not
pertain to any person who: (1) Manufacturers devices for another party
who both initiated the specifications and commercially distributes the
device; (2) sterilizes devices on a contract basis for other registered
facilities who commercially distribute the devices. * * *''
These two provisions, taken together have been interpreted to
require registration and listing by contract manufacturers or contract
sterilizers only when they are the party placing the device into
commercial distribution. We are proposing to delete current Sec.
807.20(c)(1) and (c)(2) and, in addition, would revise Sec.
807.20(a)(2) in a manner consistent with section 737(13)(A) of the FD&C
Act (21 U.S.C. 379i(13)(A)), a provision added by FDAAA that addresses
which types of establishments are subject to device registration user
fees. These changes to Sec. 807.20(a) and (c) will have the effect of
requiring all contract manufacturers and sterilizers to register and
list regardless of whether they commercially distribute the devices.
The agency believes this approach to registration and listing for these
devices and combination products best enables effective oversight by
appropriate agency components. Having all contract manufacturers and
sterilizers register and list would provide us with basic information
about the entities that make and clean devices. This information would
allow us to respond in a more timely and effective fashion in the case
of an adverse event, shortage, or other problem associated with one of
these establishments. The information would also assist us in our
fundamental regulatory activities, such as planning and scheduling
inspections.
We recognize that with regard to combination products, this
approach to registration and listing may result in registration of the
same facility and listing of the same product with more than one agency
component. However, we also note the agency is currently working to
develop harmonized electronic registration and listing systems within
FDA. We anticipate that once these harmonized systems are in place, the
agency will be able implement a more streamlined approach to facility
registration and product listing for combination products.
(b) Foreign establishments engaged in the manufacture, preparation,
propagation, compounding, or processing of a device that is imported or
offered for import into the United States are currently required to
register and to submit listing information in accordance with section
510 of the FD&C Act and Sec. 807.40 of our regulations. These foreign
establishments are also required to designate a U.S. agent, and to
provide contact information for that person to FDA.
The revised regulation will codify requirements established by
section 222 of FDAAA, which changed the timeframes in section 510(i) of
the FD&C Act for annual registration by foreign device establishments
to a specific 3-month period each year beginning on October 1 and
ending on December 31. It also would codify in part 807 certain
requirements established by section 321 of the Bioterrorism Act. The
Bioterrorism Act amended section 510(i) of the FD&C Act to require
those foreign establishments that have to register with FDA to do so by
electronic means, and to include additional pieces of information as
part of their registration. The additional information required by
section 510(i) includes the name of each ``importer of such * * *
device in the United States that is known to the establishment,'' and
the name of each ``person who imports or offers for import such * * *
device to the United States for purposes of importation.'' As discussed
at section IV.A.4 of this document, this proposal also would
incorporate, at Sec. 807.3, definitions clarifying these two new
categories of information that need to be submitted by foreign
establishments.
Most of the provisions in section 321 of the Bioterrorism Act
became effective on December 8, 2002, but the effective date of the
electronic registration requirement was later delayed by MDUFMA section
207 (which added section 510(p) of the FD&C Act) so that FDA would have
an opportunity to put systems in place to accommodate the electronic
receipt of registration information. The agency has now developed a
system, FURLS, which became operational on October 1, 2007, that makes
the electronic receipt of device establishment registration and device
listing information feasible.
3. Who Would Be Exempt From Registration and Listing?
We propose no changes to the categories of persons or
establishments that are exempt from registration requirements under
Sec. 807.65. As discussed in section IV.A.2.a. of this document,
however, we are proposing to eliminate the exemption from listing
requirements for contract manufacturers under Sec. 807.20(a), and the
exemption from registration and listing requirements for contract
manufacturers and contract sterilizers under Sec. 807.20(c)(1) and
(c)(2). As a result, all contract manufacturers and sterilizers would
need to register and list regardless of whether they put the devices
into commercial distribution.
For the same reasons as stated in the proposed revisions to part
207 of FDA's regulations addressing drug establishment registration and
listing, which were published in the Federal Register of August 29,
2006 (71 FR 51276), we are proposing to revoke exemptions in current
Sec. 807.40(a) relating to foreign establishments whose devices enter
a foreign trade zone and are re-exported from that foreign trade zone
without having entered U.S. commerce, and in Sec. 807.40(c) regarding
devices that are imported into the United States under section
801(d)(3) of the FD&C Act for further processing and then exported
without having been placed on the U.S. market. We propose eliminating
these two exemptions because of certain statutory changes that have
occurred since the publication of the final rule on foreign
establishment registration and listing. Those changes include enactment
of the Bioterrorism Act, which reflects Congress' desire to
[[Page 14517]]
increase the nation's ability to prepare for and respond effectively to
bioterrorism and other public health emergencies and Congressional
findings that greater controls over imported products be part of that
effort.
4. What Definitions and Interpretations of Terms Would Apply to Part
807?
In proposed Sec. 807.3, we set forth new definitions and
interpretations of terms as follows:
a. We are proposing to add a definition for the term Product Code
at Sec. 807.3(k) to help describe the identifying information that
would have to be submitted when listing a medical device that is exempt
from premarket notification requirements. Currently, the product code
is a three-letter code used by FDA to identify the generic category of
a device. Section 807.25(f)(1) of our regulations currently states that
the owner or operator must identify the classification name and number
when providing device listing information. In practice, however, CDRH
instead has requested and accepted the three-letter product code which
can be identified from the Web-based medical device classification
database at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfPCD/classification.cfm.
b. Proposed Sec. 807.3(v) includes a definition for FURLS, which
as stated previously, stands for FDA Unified Registration and Listing
System. FURLS is the Internet-based electronic system that owners and
operators of device establishments must use to submit device
registration and listing information to FDA.
c. As described more fully in section IV.B.3 of this document, this
proposal would help to implement the requirement in section 510(i) of
the FD&C Act, as amended by the Bioterrorism Act, that a foreign
establishment engaged in the manufacture, preparation, propagation,
compounding, or processing of a device that is imported or offered for
import into the United States provide as part of its registration with
FDA identifying information for each importer of such device that is
known to the establishment. In proposed Sec. 807.3(x), we are
proposing to define the term ``importer'' to mean a company or
individual in the United States that is an owner, consignee, or
recipient of the foreign establishment's device that is imported into
the United States. We recognize that a foreign establishment may have
more than one ``importer'' and we are proposing to include in this term
any owner, consignee, or recipient, even if not the initial owner,
consignee, or recipient, of the foreign establishment's device that is
imported into the United States. Under this proposal, the term
``importer'' would not include the consumer or patient who ultimately
purchases, receives, or is the end user of the device, unless the
foreign establishment ships the device directly to the consumer or
patient. We invite comments on our definition of importer, including
the scope of the entities included in the definition.
d. Section 510(i) of the FD&C Act, as amended by the Bioterrorism
Act, also requires that foreign establishments who are required to
register with FDA identify as part of their registration information
each ``person who imports or offers for import'' the establishments'
devices to the United States. This requirement, which would be
implemented at proposed Sec. 807.41, is discussed further in section
IV.B.3 of this document. In addition, we are proposing a separate
definition for the term ``person who imports or offers for import'' at
Sec. 807.3(y). As defined, this term would include an agent, broker,
or other entity, that the foreign establishment uses to facilitate the
importation of its device into the United States. However, consistent
with the legislative history of the Bioterrorism Act, the term ``person
who imports or offers for import'' would not include carriers. We
invite comments on our proposed definition of the term ``person who
imports or offers for import.''
B. Registration
1. Who Would Be Required To Register?
Section 510(b) of the FD&C Act states that registration
requirements apply to owners and operators of establishments engaged in
the ``manufacture, preparation, propagation, compounding, or processing
of medical devices.'' Section 510(a)(1) of the FD&C Act defines these
terms to include ``repackaging or otherwise changing the container,
wrapper or labeling of any device package in furtherance of the
distribution of the device * * *''.
The revisions we are proposing would not change the classes of
persons required to register, except to specify that all contract
manufacturers and sterilizers must register their establishments,
regardless of whether they put the device in commercial distribution or
instead return it to the specification developer or point of origin.
2. When Would Initial Registration Information Need to Be Provided?
Section 807.21, the provision specifying timeframes for
establishment registration, is being renumbered in this proposal to
Sec. 807.22. Proposed Sec. 807.22 would retain the requirement that
owners or operators must register each establishment no later than 30
calendar days after entering into an activity that triggers
registration requirements under part 807.
Under current Sec. 807.40(c), with certain limited exceptions, a
foreign owner or operator must register an establishment before a
device manufactured at the establishment may be imported or offered for
import into the United States. This proposal would not change the
timeframe for initial registration by a foreign establishment.
3. What Information Would Be Required for Registration?
Under proposed Sec. 807.25, all owners or operators would need to
provide the following information in order to register their
establishments:
a. Name of the owner or operator of each establishment. Section
807.3(f) defines the owner or operator as the corporation, subsidiary,
affiliated company, partnership, or proprietor directly responsible for
the activities of the registering establishment. While the requirement
to identify the owner or operator of the establishment is not new, we
are addressing it here to provide assistance in identifying the owner
or operator for medical device registration and listing purposes.
In practice, the owner or operator usually is the entity that has
final responsibility over the device establishment, such as the
establishment's parent company or corporate headquarters. For most
small device manufacturers who conduct their business activities at the
same site as their regulated device activities, this typically is the
same name and address as that of the registered establishment itself.
In other words, for a business that has only one location where all
medical device production activities are conducted and where corporate
responsibility for those activities resides, the owner or operator name
and address information is the same as the establishment information.
This has often been a source of confusion regarding the information
that must be submitted for registration and listing. We invite comments
and questions about what constitutes the ``owner or operator'' of a
device establishment for purposes of part 807.
b. Name, trade name(s), and address of each establishment (proposed
Sec. 807.25(b)). This provision is consistent with section 510(c) of
the FD&C Act, which requires owners and operators to register the names
and place of business of the establishment. There are no
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changes being proposed to this requirement in the revised regulation.
c. Registration number of each establishment. Section 510(e) of the
FD&C Act authorizes us to assign a registration number to any person or
establishment who registers. Under Sec. 807.35(a) of our regulations,
we currently assign a permanent registration number to each device
establishment when that establishment registers for the first time. The
proposed regulation would only change the method of delivery of the FDA
registration number to the owner or operator. FDA registration numbers
are communicated to the registrant by email after we receive the
registration information through the electronic device registration and
listing system and it has been verified by the appropriate FDA district
office. As there is no physical document to validate and return, FDA no
longer sends a validated copy of a form back to the registrant by
postal mail.
d. Name, address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail address of
the official correspondent for each establishment (proposed Sec.
807.25(e)). In this document, we continue to require information
regarding the official correspondent of the establishment because we
need a contact person to be responsible for submitting and keeping the
establishment's registration and device listing information current,
and to facilitate contact between FDA and the owner or operator. Under
proposed Sec. 807.25(e), this information must be kept current and any
change in this information must be provided to us within 30 calendar
days.
e. Information for foreign establishments only. With respect to
foreign establishments who are required to register their establishment
with FDA, we would require under proposed Sec. Sec. 807.40 and 807.41,
that such establishments submit the name, address, telephone and fax
numbers, and e-mail address for the following:
The U.S. agent;
Each importer of the establishment's device in the United
States that is known to the establishment; and
Each person who imports or offers for import the
establishment's device to the United States.
The name, address, and phone number of the United States agent is
information that already must be submitted under current Sec.
807.40(c). We are proposing that owners or operators also be required
to provide information regarding importers and persons who import or
offer for import the foreign establishment's device because of changes
made to section 510(i) of the FD&C Act by section 321 of the
Bioterrorism Act. Section 510(i), as amended, requires foreign
establishments to submit as part of their annual registration, among
other things, the name of each ``importer'' of their device that is
known to the foreign establishment and also the name of each ``person
who imports or offers for import'' the foreign establishment's device
to the United States. We, therefore, expect the person responsible for
providing the registration and listing information on behalf of the
foreign establishment to undertake appropriate due diligence in
gathering and entering the information, which would include identifying
and reporting those importers that others in his or her establishment
know of or have reason to know of. In addition to identifying them by
name, the proposal would require that the foreign establishment provide
the address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail address of each
importer and each person who imports or offers for import to enable us
to contact these persons.
We expect that some of the foreign establishments' ``importers''
will be parties who also are considered ``initial importers'' as that
term is defined in our current registration and listing regulations at
Sec. 807.3(g). Under Sec. 807.3(g), the term initial importer means
any importer who furthers the marketing of a device from a foreign
manufacturer to the person who makes the final delivery or sale of the
device to the ultimate consumer or user, but does not repackage, or
otherwise change the wrapper or labeling of the device of device
package. Because initial importers are already required to register,
the electronic registration and listing system will permit foreign
establishments to use a search mechanism built into the system to
identify those importers of the foreign establishment's devices that
are also initial importers. Foreign establishments providing
information for other types of importers such as retail establishments
and end users who are not ordinarily required to register with FDA
would have to provide the name, address and contact information for
each such importer, except they would not need to identify an end user
that is either a consumer or patient, unless the foreign establishment
ships its product directly to the consumer or patient.
Because foreign establishments may use different importers and
persons who import or offer for import for different devices, in order
to collect this information efficiently, the agency proposes to have
foreign establishments provide this information when they are listing
their devices. The electronic system will provide an interface for the
foreign establishment to identify each product's importers and persons
who import or offer for import on a listing-by-listing basis.
The fo