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510(k) Data Aggregation

    K Number
    K960183

    Validate with FDA (Live)

    Date Cleared
    1996-06-07

    (143 days)

    Product Code
    Regulation Number
    866.3110
    Age Range
    All
    Reference & Predicate Devices
    N/A
    Predicate For
    N/A
    AI/MLSaMDIVD (In Vitro Diagnostic)TherapeuticPediatricDiagnosticis PCCP AuthorizedThirdpartyExpeditedreview
    Intended Use

    The FlexSure® HP test for IgG antibodies to H. pylori in whole blood is a rapid, visually read, qualitative immunochromatographic method. The test is for use by health professionals as an aid in the diagnosis of H. pylori infection in patients with clinical signs and symptoms of gastrointestinal disease.

    Device Description

    The FlexSure® HP test for IgG antibodies to H. pylori in whole blood is a rapid, visually read, qualitative immunochromatographic method.

    AI/ML Overview

    The FlexSure® HP Test for IgG Antibodies to H. pylori in Whole Blood is a rapid, visually read, qualitative immunochromatographic method designed as an aid in diagnosing H. pylori infection in patients with gastrointestinal symptoms.

    Here's an analysis of the acceptance criteria and the studies performed:

    1. Table of Acceptance Criteria and Reported Device Performance

    The acceptance criteria are not explicitly stated as target percentages in the provided text. However, the performance of the FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test is presented in comparison to a predicate device (FlexSure® HP Serum test) and a gold standard (histology and/or urease test), as well as within specific groups (symptomatic patients, volunteer blood donors). The "acceptance criteria" are implied by demonstrating substantial equivalence to the predicate and acceptable performance against the gold standard.

    Performance MetricAcceptance Criteria (Implied by Predicate Performance)FlexSure® HP Whole Blood Performance (Reported) - Symptomatic PatientsFlexSure® HP Whole Blood Performance (Reported) - Volunteer Blood Donors
    Relative Sensitivity (vs. FlexSure® HP Serum)95% (FlexSure® HP Serum vs. ELISA)92% (without resolution) 95% (with resolution)Not Determined (meaningful comparison not possible without H. pylori confirmation)
    Relative Specificity (vs. FlexSure® HP Serum)94% (FlexSure® HP Serum vs. ELISA)91% (without resolution) 94% (with resolution)99%
    Overall Agreement (vs. FlexSure® HP Serum)95% (FlexSure® HP Serum vs. ELISA)92% (without resolution) 95% (with resolution)97%
    Relative Sensitivity (vs. Histology/Urease)92% (FlexSure® HP Serum vs. Histology/Urease)88%Not Applicable
    Relative Specificity (vs. Histology/Urease)76% (FlexSure® HP Serum vs. Histology/Urease)74%Not Applicable
    Overall Agreement (vs. Histology/Urease)84% (FlexSure® HP Serum vs. Histology/Urease)82%Not Applicable
    Within-site ReproducibilityNot explicitly stated96%N/A
    Between-site ReproducibilityNot explicitly stated89%N/A

    2. Sample Sizes Used for the Test Set and Data Provenance

    • Whole Blood Test Set (Symptomatic Patients): 173 patients
      • Data Provenance: Multi-center trial at six different gastroenterology clinics located in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. This indicates a prospective and multi-national study.
    • Whole Blood Test Set (Volunteer Blood Donors): 233 volunteer blood donors
      • Data Provenance: Not explicitly stated, but implies a prospective collection for this specific study.

    3. Number of Experts Used to Establish the Ground Truth for the Test Set and Their Qualifications

    The document does not explicitly state the number of experts used for establishing the ground truth when comparing the FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test against histology and/or urease tests.

    • Qualifications of Experts: Not specified. However, the use of "histology" and "urease test" implies analysis by qualified laboratory personnel, likely pathologists, gastroenterologists, or trained technicians, but specific qualifications (e.g., years of experience) are not provided.

    4. Adjudication Method for the Test Set

    • For comparisons against FlexSure® HP Serum test:
      • An adjudication method was used to resolve discordant serological results. This involved using "histology and/or a urease test." The specific process (e.g., how conflicting histology vs. urease results were handled, or if multiple readings were done) is not detailed.
    • For comparisons directly against histology and/or urease test:
      • The "ground truth" was established by histology and/or urease test. No further adjudication of these primary methods is described within the context of the whole blood test performance.

    5. If a Multi-Reader Multi-Case (MRMC) Comparative Effectiveness Study Was Done, and Effect Size

    No, an MRMC comparative effectiveness study involving human readers with and without AI assistance was not conducted. This device is a diagnostic test for H. pylori antibodies, not an imaging or interpretation aid for human readers in the way an AI would be.

    6. If a Standalone (Algorithm Only Without Human-in-the-Loop Performance) Was Done

    Yes, the studies presented are for the standalone performance of the FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test. It is a visually read, qualitative immunochromatographic method, which is inherently a standalone "algorithm" (the test strips chemical reaction and visual result) without a human-in-the-loop performance component in the traditional sense of AI-assisted diagnostics. The human simply reads the result produced by the device.

    7. The Type of Ground Truth Used

    • For comparison against the predicate device (FlexSure® HP Serum test): The ground truth for the predicate device itself was established by comparison with a commercial microwell ELISA serological test. For the FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test, the FlexSure® HP Serum test was used as a comparator, and discordant results were further resolved by histology and/or urease test (which are forms of pathology/diagnostic testing).
    • For direct comparison of FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test: The ground truth was established by histology and/or urease test. These are direct diagnostic methods for H. pylori infection, often considered the gold standard.

    8. The Sample Size for the Training Set

    The provided text describes performance evaluation studies, not the development or training of the device. Therefore, a "training set" sample size for the FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test is not applicable or provided. The "basic methodology and format" were established previously with the FlexSure® HP Serum test.

    9. How the Ground Truth for the Training Set Was Established

    As no training set is described for the FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test, this information is not applicable or provided. The FlexSure® HP Serum test's performance characteristics, which presumably formed the basis for the FlexSure® HP Whole Blood test development, were established by comparison with a commercial microwell ELISA serological test, histology, and 13C-urea breath test.

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