Dassault Systèmes, FDA collaborate to accelerate medical devices

5-year extension of collaborative research agreement aims to spur medical device innovation by enabling innovative, new product designs.


Dassault Systemes

Dassault Systèmes officials announce a 5-year extension of its collaboration with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), using the 3DExperience platform to develop a new digital tool for more efficient regulatory review of cardiovascular and medical devices. The hope, for this first-of-its-kind process, is that it will increase industry innovation and pave the way for an efficient path for patients to access safe, effective new treatments for heart disease.

This second phase of the ongoing collaboration supports the 21st Century Cures Act, using virtual patients based on computational modeling and simulation to improve efficiency of clinical trials for new medical device designs.  A project with the Living Heart simulated 3D heart model will examine the use of heart simulation as a source of digital evidence for new cardiovascular device approvals. This includes an in silico clinical trial aimed to reduce animal testing or the number of patients required while still ensuring safety and efficacy of the device is demonstrated. The digital process is intended to be more efficient and less expensive than current ones – whose delays and costs can impede patient access to novel treatments – without losing rigor or confidence in a device’s safety and efficacy.

The FDA has publicly recognized the public health benefits offered by modeling and simulation, and the potential for in silico clinical trials to safely advance medical products more efficiently, from preclinical studies through clinical trials to market.

“Modeling and simulation can help to inform clinical trial designs, support evidence of effectiveness, identify the most relevant patients to study, and assess product safety. In some cases, in silico clinical trials have already been shown to produce similar results as human clinical trials,” says Tina Morrison, Ph.D., Deputy Director in the Division of Applied Mechanics, Office of Science and Engineering Labs, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, FDA. “The FDA continues to encourage research to facilitate the introduction of safe and effective therapeutic solutions.”

“Our collaboration with the FDA underscores the relevance and sustainability of digital twin experiences created with the 3DExperience platform to test devices and drugs in scientific and medical innovation,” says Claire Biot, vice president, Life Sciences Industry, Dassault Systèmes. “Enriching technology already well established in regulated industries such as aerospace and automotive, virtual patients support the complex development of therapies for the heart, brain and more by eliminating traditional cost and time bottlenecks. With this new review process, Dassault Systèmes and the FDA can be partners in the transformative impact of the virtual world on industrial innovation, new treatments and the patient experience."