| Literature DB >> 32986873 |
Herbert Afegenwi Mbunkah1, Jens Reinhardt2, Chancelar Kafere1, Heiner Scheiblauer3, Irena Prat4, Claudius Micha Nübling1.
Abstract
Blood transfusion remains a routine life-saving medical procedure that helps replace blood lost due to surgery, injury or disease. The quality of transfused blood is crucial in this process as blood donors must be free of transfusion-transmissible infections and donated blood should be compatible to that of the recipient. The quality of donated blood could be affected by the quality of in vitro diagnostic medical devices (IVDs) used in the screening process. Consequently, the need for high-quality, safe and well-performing IVDs for use in transfusion medicine arises, accompanied by the need for tight regulations in this domain. In the European Union, the new IVD Regulation will replace the existing IVD Directive within a five-year transitional period. Manufacturers of IVDs are expected to fully comply with the new Regulation by 26 May 2022. In this review, we address the major differences relating to marketing authorization and testing between this new Regulation and its predecessor. We further present the main elements of the prequalification assessment introduced by the WHO for IVDs, including disease-specific IVDs for blood screening laboratories.Entities:
Keywords: IVD regulation; TTIs; blood transfusion; prequalification
Year: 2020 PMID: 32986873 DOI: 10.1111/vox.12996
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vox Sang ISSN: 0042-9007 Impact factor: 2.144