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510(k) Data Aggregation
(174 days)
Crystal Spinal System & Vertu Spinal System, Lucent Spinal System, Zeus Spinal System, Ceres-C Spinal
Crystal® devices are intended for spinal fusion at one or two contiguous levels in skeletally mature patients with degenerative disc disease (DDD) of the cervical spine. DDD is defined as neck pain of discogenic origin with degeneration of the disc confirmed by history and radiographic studies. Implanted via an open, anterior approach for the C2-C3 disc space to the C7-T1 disc space and packed with autograft bone graft comprised of cancellous and/or corticocancellous bone graft.
The device is intended to be used with supplemental fixation systems that have been cleared for use in the cervical spine (i.e., anterior plate systems).
Patients must have undergone a regimen of at least six (6) weeks of non-operative treatment prior to being treated with these devices.
Vertu® devices are stand-alone interbody fusion devices intended for spinal fusion procedures at one level from the C2/ C3 disc space to the C7/T1 disc space in skeletally mature patients with degenerative disc disease of the cervical spine. DDD is defined as neck pain of discogenic origin with degeneration of the disc confirmed by history and radiographic studies. Implants are to be implanted via an open, anterior approach and packed with autograft or allogenic bone graft comprised of cancellous and/or corticocancellous bone graft.
Patients must have undergone a regimen of at least six (6) weeks non-operative treatment prior to being treated with these devices.
The implant is designed to accommodate two screws should be used to ensure adequate fixation of the implant.
Lucent® are intervertebral body fusion devices are intended for spinal fusion procedures at one or two contiguous levels (L2-S1) in skeletally mature patients with degenerative disc disease (DDD). DDD is defined as back pain of discogenic origin with degeneration of the disc confirmed by history and radiographic studies. DDD patients may also have up to Grade 1 spondylolisthesis or retrolisthesis at the involved levels. These patients may have had a previous non-fusion spinal surgery at the involved spinal level(s).
This device is intended to be used with supplemental spinal fixation systems that have been cleared for use in the lumbosacral spine (i.e., posterior pedicle screw and rod systems, and anterior screw and rod systems).
This device is intended to be used with autograft or allogenic bone graft comprised of cancellous and/or corticocancellous bone graft. Patients must have undergone a regimen of at least six (6) months non-operative treatment prior to being treated with this device.
The Zeus® Lumbar Interbody Fusion Devices are indicated for intervertebral body spinal fusion procedures in sketally mature patients with degenerative disc disease (DDD) at one level or two contiguous levels from L2-S1. DDD is defined as discogenic back pain with degeneration of the disc confirmed by patient history and radiographic studies. These DDD patients may also have up to Grade 1 spondylolisthesis at the involved level. The Zeus® Lumbar Interbody Fusion Devices are intended to be used with autograft or allogenic bone graft comprised of cancellous and/or corticocancellous bone graft and supplemental fixation. Patients should have at least six (6) months of non-operative treatment prior to treatment with an intervertebral cage.
The Ceres®-C Stand-Alone Cervical System is a stand-alone anterior cervical interbody fusion device indicated for use in skeletally mature patients with degenerative disc disease (DDD) with accompanying radicular symptoms at one level from C2-T1. DDD is defined as discogenic pain with degeneration of the disc confirmed by history and radiographic studies. These patients should have had six weeks of non-operative treatment. The Ceres@-C Stand-Alone Cervical implant is intended to be used with autograft or allogenic bone graft comprised of cancellous and/or corticocancellous bone graft and implanted with an anterior approach.
The Omega XP device is indicated for intervertebral body spinal fusion procedures in skeletally mature patients with degenerative disc disease (DDD) at one or two contiguous levels from L2-S1. DDD is defined as discogenic back pain with degeneration of the disc confirmed by patient history and radiographic studies. These DDD patients may also have up to Grade I spondylolisthesis or retrolisthesis at the involved level. Omega XP device is intended to be used with autograft or allogenic bone graft comprised of cancellous and/or corticocancellous bone graft and supplemental fration. Patients should have at least six (6) months of non-operative treatment with an intervertebral cage.
The Spinal Elements' Crystal Cervical Interbody System is an intervertebral body fusion device for use in cervical spine surgery. The device is generally box-shaped with various holes throughout its geometry to allow for the placement of bone graft material. The exterior of the device has teeth or other generally sharp engagement members on the superior and inferior surfaces to help prevent the device from migrating once it is surgically positioned.
Spinal Elements' Vertu Cervical Interbody System is composed of an implant body and fixation screws. The implant body is generally a box-shaped device with holes through its body for the placement of graft material. Additionally, it has teeth located on its superior and inferior external surfaces to help keep the device from migrating once placed in its desired location. There are also screw holes located in the implant body. Each screw hole is lined in its internal surface with a titanium ring insert. Screws pass through screw holes of the implant body and affix to bone to help prevent implant migration. When fully seated, the screw head rests on the titanium insert of the screw hole.
The Lucent device is an interbody fusion device for use in lumbar spine surgery. Because PEEK is translucent, tantalum pins are placed in various locations of the PEEK device to serve as markers for radiographic visualization of the device orientation. The Lucent devices are of various shapes, heights, width, length and lordosis to suit patient anatomy.
The Zeus Interbody Fusion Devices are comprised of implants designed to treat the cervical and lumbar spine. The implants are available in a range of sizes and shapes to accommodate variations in surgical approach and patient anatomy. Each cage has a hollow center to allow placement of autograft. Ridges on the superior and inferior surfaces of the device help to grip the endplates and prevent expulsion.
The Ceres-C Stand-Alone Cervical System includes a PEEK spacer with Tantalum markers, and a titanium interbody plate and screws. The spacer component is assembled to the interbody plate and implanted anteriorly. The endplate contacting surfaces of the spacer component include serrations, and the plate component includes two holes for inserting one bone screw in each vertebral body. The plate component also includes a screw lock at each hole. The bone screws are available in a variety of diameters and lengths. The interbody plate components are available in a variety of heights. The spacer components are available in a variety of depths, widths, and heights.
The Omega XP System devices are used to maintain disc space distraction in skeletally mature adults requiring intervertebral body fusion in the lumbar spine. They are designed to be used in conjunction with supplemental spinal fixation instrumentation. The series is comprised of cages of various sizes and are designed to expand in height intraoperatively to accommodate variations in surgical approach and patient anatomy. Each cage has a hollow center to allow placement of autograft inside of the cage. Ridges on the superior and inferior surfaces of the device help to grip the endplates and prevent expulsion.
This document is a 510(k) Premarket Notification from the FDA regarding several spinal intervertebral body fusion devices manufactured by Spinal Elements, Inc. The document states that the devices are substantially equivalent to previously marketed predicate devices and therefore do not require a premarket approval application.
Critically, this document is a regulatory approval notice based on the substantial equivalence principle, not a study evaluating the performance of an AI/ML powered medical device. It explicitly states under "Performance Data" that: "No changes were made to the existing devices nor were any new components were added to the systems. Therefore, no additional testing was required or performed."
As such, this document does not contain the information required to answer the prompt regarding acceptance criteria and a study that proves the device meets those criteria for an AI/ML powered medical device. The device described (intervertebral body fusion devices) is a physical implant, not a software-based AI/ML product.
Therefore, I cannot provide the requested information based on this document.
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