(275 days)
Not Found
No
The device description and performance studies focus on the mechanical properties and imaging artifact reduction of skull pins, with no mention of AI or ML algorithms for analysis, interpretation, or decision support.
No.
It is an instrument designed for rigid fixation of the skull during surgery, which is a supportive function during a medical procedure, not a treatment for a disease or condition itself.
No
The device is designed for the fixation of a head-holder unit to the patient's skull during surgery, providing rigid immobilization. Its primary function is mechanical support and artifact reduction in imaging, not the diagnosis of a condition or disease.
No
The device is a physical component (pins made of Carbon-Fiber Reinforced PEEK) intended for direct contact with the patient's skull for fixation. It is not software.
Based on the provided information, this device is not an IVD (In Vitro Diagnostic).
Here's why:
- IVD Definition: In vitro diagnostics are tests performed on samples taken from the human body, such as blood, urine, or tissue, to detect diseases, conditions, or infections.
- Device Function: The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are a physical device used for the mechanical fixation of a patient's skull during surgery. They are implanted into the skull to hold the head in a fixed position.
- Lack of Biological Sample Analysis: The device does not analyze any biological samples from the patient. Its function is purely mechanical and structural.
Therefore, the intended use and function of the Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins clearly fall outside the definition of an In Vitro Diagnostic device.
N/A
Intended Use / Indications for Use
Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are designed for the fixation of a compatible head-holder unit to the patient's skull. This allows the fixation of the head and neck during craniotomy and subsequent neurosurgical procedures. These pins reduce the incidence of artifacts in images acquired intra-operatively using CT, MR (Conditional) or fluoroscopy.
Product codes
HBL
Device Description
The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are part of a fixation system which provides rigid immobilization of the patient's skull during surgery. The Pins are the components which get in direct contact with the patient and are made of Carbon-Fiber Reinforced PEEK. The Pins are designed to penetrate the skull tabula externa to provide rigid fixation to compatible head-holder units while significantly reducing imaging artifacts. The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are intended for use by physicians or their assistants in a hospital environment only. The product may not be used repeatedly and is a single-use device accordingly. A compatible head- holder unit is required for the safe and effective use of the device. The use scenario is primarily rigid fixation of the patient's skull during surgery e.g. percutaneous craniotomy. The device requires the same user actions as the listed predicate device, namely insertion and removal from the head-holder unit. A valid fixation setup with a compatible head-holder unit consists of exactly three sterile pins.
Mentions image processing
Not Found
Mentions AI, DNN, or ML
Not Found
Input Imaging Modality
CT, MR (Conditional) or fluoroscopy
Anatomical Site
patient's skull
Indicated Patient Age Range
over 5 years old
Intended User / Care Setting
physicians or their assistants in a hospital environment only
Description of the training set, sample size, data source, and annotation protocol
Not Found
Description of the test set, sample size, data source, and annotation protocol
A clinical study involving 11 patients (male and female aged over 5 years old as per the selection criteria) undergoing craniotomy validated that the device is suitable for the intended use as part of a rigid fixation system for craniotomy and neurosurgical procedures supporting the claim of substantial equivalence with the predicate device.
Summary of Performance Studies (study type, sample size, AUC, MRMC, standalone performance, key results)
The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins have been verified and validated using both clinical and non-clinical data according to Brainlab procedures for product design and development.
A clinical study involving 11 patients (male and female aged over 5 years old as per the selection criteria) undergoing craniotomy validated that the device is suitable for the intended use as part of a rigid fixation system for craniotomy and neurosurgical procedures supporting the claim of substantial equivalence with the predicate device.
Non-clinical data collected regarding mechanical performance testing, compatibility testing with specified compatible head-holder units and image artifact testing showed that the new device is capable of performing in an equivalent way to the predicate device but with improvements to the artifact performance for intra-operative imaging.
The verification activities consisted of testing the mechanical properties of the pin through a range of compression and shear tests, imaging comparison study and Magnetic Resonance (MR) compatibility testing.
Key results from MR testing:
- Measurement of Magnetically Induced Displacement Force on Medical Device in the MR environment (ASTM F2052-06e1): No magnetically induced displacement force was detectable for the given test conditions.
- Measurement of Magnetically Induced Torque on Medical Devices in the MR Environment (ASTM F2213-06): Magnetically induced torque of 10 micro Nm 3070 HU Integra MAYFIELD® Radiolucent Skull Pins > 3070 HU Predicate Pins = 280 HU Brainlab Radiolucent Skull Pins = 490 HU.
Clinical tests being submitted include a series of mechanical tests on human cadavers which verified that the pins have the required performance and properties to meet the intended use.
Brainlab released an unsterile version of the pins (article name: "Disposable Radiolucent Skull Pins") in non-US markets to collect customer feedback regarding performance, side-effects and usability and the results have been collated as a Post-Market Clinical Study. Subjects tested were both female and male aged over 5 years old undergoing surgical procedures involving craniotomy and burr-hole biopsy. The study evaluation form verified that the users found the product safe and effective to use for rigid head fixation, the intended use, so hence is substantially equivalent to the predicate device.
Non-clinical tests being submitted include verification that the mechanical properties remain the same after cleaning, packaging (including transport and shelf life) and sterilization and a full set of mechanical tests verifying that the device meets the requirements and specifications derived during the Brainlab product design and development process. The results of these tests showed that the device is safe and effective to use for rigid head fixation so hence is substantially equivalent to the predicate device.
Testing of the Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins compatibility with the specified head holders has been verified, particularly considering the orientation and application of forces to the patient's head. The conclusion of the testing was that for the head holder units listed on the instruction leaflet the product is safe and effective to use for rigid head fixation so hence is substantially equivalent to the predicate device.
Key Metrics (Sensitivity, Specificity, PPV, NPV, etc.)
Not Found
Predicate Device(s)
Brainlab Headpins (K954789)
Reference Device(s)
Not Found
Predetermined Change Control Plan (PCCP) - All Relevant Information
Not Found
§ 882.4460 Neurosurgical head holder (skull clamp).
(a)
Identification. A neurosurgical head holder (skull clamp) is a device used to clamp the patient's skull to hold head and neck in a particular position during surgical procedures.(b)
Classification. Class II (performance standards).
0
R 122225
510(K) SUMMARY FOR STERILE RADIOLUCENT SKULL PINS . .
| Manufacturer: | Brainlab AG
Kapellenstrasse 12
85622 Feldkirchen
Germany
Phone: +49 89 99 15 68 0
Fax: +49 89 99 15 68 33 |
|-----------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Submitter: | Rainer Birkenbach |
| Contact person: | Alexander Schwiersch |
| Summary date: | 4/22/2013 |
| Device: | Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins |
| Trade name: | Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins |
| Common/Classification Name: | Disposable Head Pins |
| Predicate Device: | Brainlab Headpins (K954789) |
| Device classification name: | Neurosurgical Head Holder (Skull Clamp) |
| Regulatory Class: | Class II |
| Regulation Number: | |
| Product Code: | HBL |
| Intended use: | Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are designed for the fixation of a compatible head-holder unit to the patient's skull. This allows the fixation of the head and neck during craniotomy and subsequent neurosurgical procedures. These pins reduce the incidence of artifacts in images acquired intra- operatively using CT, MR (Conditional) or fluoroscopy |
| Device description: | The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are part of a fixation system which provides rigid immobilization of the patient's skull during surgery. The Pins are the components which get in direct contact with the patient and are made of Carbon-Fiber Reinforced PEEK. The Pins are designed to penetrate the skull tabula externa to provide rigid fixation to compatible head-holder units while significantly reducing imaging artifacts. |
| | The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are intended for use by physicians or their assistants in a hospital environment only. The product may not be used repeatedly and is a single-use device accordingly. A compatible head- holder unit is required for the safe and effective use of the device. |
| | The use scenario is primarily rigid fixation of the patient's skull during surgery e.g. percutaneous craniotomy. The device requires the same user |
FORM 04-195
REVISION 1
PAGE 1 OF 4
1
actions as the listed predicate device, namely insertion and removal from the head-holder unit. A valid fixation setup with a compatible head-holder unit consists of exactly three sterile pins.
The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins have been verified and validated using both clinical and non-clinical data according to Brainlab procedures for product design and development. The information provided by Brainlab in this 510(k) application supports the claim of substantial equivalence with the predicate device Brainlab Headpins.
A clinical study involving 11 patients (male and female aged over 5 years old as per the selection criteria) undergoing craniotomy validated that the device is suitable for the intended use as part of a rigid fixation system for craniotomy and neurosurgical procedures supporting the claim of substantial equivalence with the predicate device.
Non-clinical data collected regarding mechanical performance testing, compatibility testing with specified compatible head-holder units and image artifact testing showed that the new device is capable of performing in an equivalent way to the predicate device but with improvements to the artifact performance for intra-operative imaging.
Changes to Predicate |
---|
Device: |
The changes compared with the predicate device are that the shaft of the pin has changed diameter and is smooth to press fit into the head clamp rather than screw into a head ring. The predicate device was made of two components (ceramic tip assembled into a PEEK threaded screw) whereas the new device is molded entirely of PEEK. Also the Brainlab Headpins came with a torque wrench to limit the forces while tightening but for the Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins this is not included as it is built into or is an accessory of the head holder.
The predicate device is reusable and delivered non-sterile to be steam sterilized by the user before each use. The Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are single use and delivered sterile (sterilization method - EO).
Both the predicate and the Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are labeled as compatible with MR. The complete skull pins MR Conditional labeling can be seen in the user manual.
The sum of changes for this device does not significantly affect the safety or effectiveness of the device as the operating principle is identical, the essential shape has not changed and no new materials are being used (the ceramic material is excluded, the part is solely made of PEEK now instead of being two assembled components) so the device is substantially equivalent to the predicate device.
Verification/validation The verification activities consisted of testing the mechanical properties of the summary: pin through a range of compression and shear tests, imaging comparison study and Magnetic Resonance (MR) compatibility testing. The following tests were performed for imaging and MR Compatibility:
Substantial equivalence:
FORM 04-195
2
Test Protocol | Standard | Summary |
---|---|---|
Measurement of | ||
Magnetically | ||
Induced | ||
Displacement | ||
Force on | ||
Medical Device | ||
in the MR | ||
environment | ASTM F2052- | |
06e1 | No magnetically induced | |
displacement force was detectable | ||
for the given test conditions. | ||
Measurement of | ||
Magnetically | ||
Induced Torque | ||
on Medical | ||
Devices in the | ||
MR Environment | ASTM F2213-06 | Magnetically induced torque of |
$10\mu Nm$ 3070 HU Integra MAYFIELD® Radiolucent | ||
Skull Pins > 3070 HU Predicate Pins = 280 HU Brainlab Radiolucent Skull Pins = | ||
490 HU |
All tests were passed according to the predetermined acceptance criteria stemming from the intended use.
.
REVISION 1
·
3
- The ASTM F2182-11a standard (RF Heating for implants) was used for this test even though the product is not an implant as this enables a standardized RF Heating test set up to be used. A simulation was run which verified that complete immersion in gel creates more RF heating than the case where the test object is in air and only lightly touching a gel phantom (mirroring the clinical case), so is the worst case and can be used to determine the maximum RF heating .
The cleaning, sterilization and packaging validations, including accelerated aging and transportation testing, have been successfully completed to the preapproved protocol.
Clinical tests being submitted include a series of mechanical tests on human cadavers which verified that the pins have the required performance and properties to meet the intended use. Also, Brainlab released an unsterile version of the pins (article name: "Disposable Radiolucent Skull Pins") in non-US markets to collect customer feedback regarding performance, side-effects and usability and the results have been collated as a Post-Market Clinical Study. Subjects tested were both female and male aged over 5 years old undergoing surgical procedures involving craniotomy and burr-hole biopsy. The study evaluation form verified that the users found the product safe and effective to use for rigid head fixation, the intended use, so hence is substantially equivalent to the predicate device.
Non-clinical tests being submitted include verification that the mechanical properties remain the same after cleaning, packaging (including transport and shelf life) and sterilization and a full set of mechanical tests verifying that the device meets the requirements and specifications derived during the Brainlab product design and development process. The results of these tests showed that the device is safe and effective to use for rigid head fixation so hence is substantially equivalent to the predicate device.
Testing of the Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins compatibility with the specified head holders has been verified, particularly considering the orientation and application of forces to the patient's head. The conclusion of the testing was that for the head holder units listed on the instruction leaflet the product is safe and effective to use for rigid head fixation so hence is substantially equivalent to the predicate device.
In conclusion all verification and validation tests have been successfully completed to the pre-approved test protocols and have met the predefined acceptance criteria. We believe the information provided proves substantial · equivalence with the predicate device.
FORM 04-195
4
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES
Image /page/4/Picture/1 description: The image shows the logo for the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. The logo consists of a circular seal with the text "DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES • USA" arranged around the perimeter. Inside the circle is a stylized symbol featuring three abstract, wave-like shapes.
Public Health Service
Food and Drug Administration 10903 New Hampshire Avenue Document Control Center - WO66-G609 Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002
April 26,2013
Brainlab AG c/o-Alexander-Schwiersch Kapellenstrasse 12 85622 Feldkirchen Germany
Re: K12225
Trade/Device Name: Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins Regulation Number: 21 CFR 882.4460 Regulation Name: Neurosurgical Head Holder (Skull Clamp) Regulatory Class: Class II Product Code: HBL Dated: April 22, 2013 Received: April 26, 2013
Dear Mr. Schwiersch:
We have reviewed your Section 510(k) premarket notification of intent to market the device referenced above and have determined the device is substantially equivalent (for the indications for use stated in the enclosure) to legally marketed predicate devices marketed in interstate commerce prior to May 28, 1976, the enactment date of the Medical Device Amendments, or to devices that have been reclassified in accordance with the provisions of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (Act) that do not require approval of a premarket approval application (PMA). You may, therefore, market the device, subject to the general controls provisions of the Act. The general controls provisions of the Act include requirements for annual registration, listing of devices, good manufacturing practice, labeling, and prohibitions against misbranding and adulteration. Please note: CDRH does not evaluate information related to contract liability warranties. We remind you; however, that device labeling must be truthful and not misleading.
If your device is classified (see above) into either class II (Special Controls) or class III (PMA), it may be subject to additional controls. Existing major regulations affecting your device can be found in the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 21, Parts 800 to 898. In addition, FDA may publish further announcements concerning your device in the Federal Register.
Please be advised that FDA's issuance of a substantial equivalence determination does not mean that FDA has made a determination that your device complies with other requirements of the Act or any Federal statutes and regulations administered by other Federal agencies. You must comply with all the Act's requirements, including, but not limited to: registration and listing (21 CFR Part 807); labeling (21 CFR Part 801); medical device reporting (reporting of medical
5
Page 2 - Mr. Alexander Schwiersch
device-related adverse events) (21 CFR 803); good manufacturing practice requirements as set forth in the quality systems (OS) regulation (21 CFR Part 820); and if applicable, the electronic product radiation control provisions (Sections 531-542 of the Act); 21 CFR 1000-1050.
If you desire specific advice for your device on our labeling regulation (21 CFR Part 801), please go to: http://www.fda.gov/AboutFDA/CentersOffices/CDRH/CDRHOffices/ucm115809.htm for the Center for Devices and Radiological Health's (CDRH's) Office of Compliance. Also, please note the regulation entitled, "Misbranding by reference to premarket notification" (21CFR Part 807.97). For questions regarding the reporting of adverse events under the MDR-regulation (21 CFR Part 803), please go to:
http://www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/Safety/ReportaProblem/default.htm for the CDRH's Office of Surveillance and Biometrics/Division of Postmarket Surveillance.
You may obtain other general information on your responsibilities under the Act from the Division of Small Manufacturers, International and Consumer Assistance at its toll-free number (800) 638-2041 or (301) 796-7100 or at its Internet address: http://www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/ResourcesforYou/Industry/default.htm.
Sincerely yours,
Joyce M. Whang -S
for Victor Krauthamer, Ph.D. Acting Director Division of Neurological and Physical Medicine Devices Office of Device Evaluation Center for Devices and Radiological Health
Enclosure
6
Indications for Use
510(k) Number (if known): K122225
Device Name: Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins
-Indications-For-Use :-
Sterile Radiolucent Skull Pins are designed for the fixation of a compatible head-holder unit to the patient's skull. This allows the fixation of the head and neck during craniotomy and subsequent neurosurgical procedures. These pins reduce the incidence of artifacts in images acquired intra-operatively using CT, MR (Conditional) or fluoroscopy.
Prescription Use × (Part 21 CFR 801 Subpart D) AND/OR
Over-The-Counter Use (21 CFR 801 Subpart C)
(PLEASE DO NOT WRITE BELOW THIS LINE-CONTINUE ON ANOTHER PAGE IF NEEDED)
Concurrence of CDRH, Office of Device Evaluation (ODE)
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411 | firms |
(Division Sign Off) Division of Neurological and Physical Medicine Devices (DNPMD)
K122225 510(k) Number _
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