August 12, 2021

[Ask the Expert] The Importance of Clinical Data

Sources of Data, Literature Searches, Weighting and Appraisal and Effective Presentation in your CER or PER

This session’s topic: The Importance of Clinical Data: Sources of Data, Literature Searches, Weighting & Appraisal and Effective Presentation in your CER or PER

During this 30 minute Q&A session, our President Laurie Mitchell answers questions on how to generate, analyze, and assess clinical data pertaining to your IVD or medical device. In addition, she discusses the best practices for conducting literature searches and how to effectively present your data in your Clinical Evaluation Report or Performance Evaluation Report.

Who should watch this webinar?

Those Regulatory, Quality and Clinical leaders and teams who develop, write, review or approve clinical evaluation reports or performance evaluation reports for EU MDR or IVDR submissions.

Watch the recording!

How to Empower Data-Driven Decisions in Your Organization

Every day, pharma and medical device companies need data from Systematic Literature Reviews (SLRs) to inform, direct, and help drive their internal processes and decisions. Of course, clinical literature is also required for compliance with global regulatory requirements. Conducting SLRs to search, screen, and extract data from published sources can present challenges to your team in terms of expertise (e.g., medical librarian), methodology, and resources. It takes trained people with the availability to screen, review, and analyze the literature.

Download our free white paper, Systematic Literature Review: How to Empower Data-Driven Decisions in Your Organization to read more on this topic.

You can also watch our webinar on this topic.

Our President Laurie Mitchell joins Jennifer Tetzlaff, Research Product Specialist with Evidence Partners, to talk to you about the following points:

  • Examples of how the use of published data can support regulatory expectations
  • When to conduct a systematic literature review
  • Best practices for conducting a methodologically-sound SLR
  • Use of available tools and technology
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August 11, 2021

[Ask the Expert] Systematic Literature Review

systematic literature review

This session’s topic: Systematic Literature Review: What is it and why is it so important?

Do you have specific questions about the steps of the systematic literature review process or questions regarding your medical device or IVD? During this 45-minute Q&A session, our President Laurie Mitchell answers questions about the steps to conduct a methodologically sound SLR​​. In addition, she discusses how to leverage published data to meet regulatory expectations and inform internal decision-making from marketing initiatives and clinical strategies to global regulatory requirements.

Who should watch this webinar?

Those Regulatory, Quality and Clinical leaders and teams who develop, write, review or approve Systematic Literature Reviews for EU MDR or IVDR submissions, meta-analyses, regulatory response support, development of clinical marketing materials, etc.

Watch the recording!

Watch Our Related Webinar for an In-Depth Look at the SLR Process

With the implementation of IVDR and MDR requirements, device manufacturers often struggle to align their internal processes and systems to comply with these rigorous regulations. Consequently, companies realize the need to review published literature for device-specific clinical data. However many manufacturers may not be familiar with or have the capability to perform all steps of the rigorous systematic literature review process, including screening, selection and data extraction. 

Watch our webinar where we break down the steps of the SLR process and take a wholistic approach to conducting an IVDR-compliant SLR. Using case studies, the presentation illustrates the effective use of SLR-derived data to develop the Scientific Validity Report (SVR) and the Clinical Performance Report (CPR). We encourage professionals from the medical device industry to watch as well, as the content is also relevant to MDR requirements, which align closely with IVDR.

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