Abstract

Manufacturing of medical devices is strictly controlled by authorities, and manufacturers must conform to the regulatory requirements of the region in which a medical device is being marketed for use. In general, these requirements make no difference between the physical device, embedded software running inside a physical device. or software that constitutes the device in itself. As a result, standalone software with intended medical use is considered to be a medical device. Consequently, its development must meet the same requirements as the physical medical device manufacturing. This practice creates a unique challenge for organizations developing medical software. In this paper, we pinpoint a number of regulatory requirement mismatches between physical medical devices and standalone medical device software. The view is based on experiences from industry, from the development of all-software medical devices as well as from defining the manufacturing process so that it meets the regulatory requirements.

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