Search Results
Found 1 results
510(k) Data Aggregation
(64 days)
The Harvey® PV Dry is a prevacuum and post vacuum drying sterilizer intended to provide sterilization of wrapped or unwrapped medical instruments, surgical devices and other heat stable devices in pouches, surgical packs, dental handpieces, instruments, surgical devices and outer water is required for operation of the Harvey® PV Dry.
The sterilizer has four standard cycles: Unwrapped Instruments (135C for 3 minutes); Wrapped Instruments (121C for 30 minute); Special, for dental handpieces (5 minutes (155c for 11ve manator), I 2015 (15) 10 11 (15 ) 10 routine testing of the steam penetration capability into packs. The parameters are fixed for each cycle.
The Harvey® PV Dry is a pre/post-vacuum table top steam sterilizer. Its enclosure is made of plastic. The outside dimensions are 15.5"Hx19"Wx23"D, it weighs 115lbs and the chamber is 10" in diameter. The chamber is made from stainless steel at 45 it weighs 11910s and the enamour is 10 - an Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Pressure Vessel Code.
The provided text is a 510(k) summary for the Harvey® PV Dry steam sterilizer. While it discusses the device's technical characteristics, intended use, and substantial equivalence to a predicate device, it does not explicitly contain a table of acceptance criteria nor a detailed study report that proves the device meets specific acceptance criteria in a quantitative manner as typically found in medical device performance studies.
The document states that "Validation studies were conducted by SPS Medical Supply Corporation... Validation testing is in accordance with ANSI/AAMI ST55, ANSI/AAMI ST37. Since neither standard specifically addresses handpiece cycle validation, additional handpiece cycle validation testing was performed with the protocol being written in accordance with FDA Draft Guidance Document on Dental Handpieces, 1995, and the Guidance on Premarket Notification Submissions for Sterilizers Intended for Use in Health Care Facilities, 1993. Successful sterilization was achieved in all three validations and the declarations of conformity to the consensus standards are located in Section III. Testing results and raw data are contained in the product's device master record."
However, this summary does not provide the specific numerical acceptance criteria (e.g., "sensitivity > X%", "specificity > Y%") or the detailed performance metrics (e.g., "observed sensitivity Z%", "observed specificity W%") from these validation studies. It only states that "Successful sterilization was achieved in all three validations."
Therefore, I cannot populate the table or answer all the questions directly from the provided text. I will answer what is available and indicate when information is not present.
Acceptance Criteria and Device Performance
1. A table of acceptance criteria and the reported device performance
Acceptance Criteria (from recognized standards & guidance) | Reported Device Performance (from validation studies) |
---|---|
General Sterilization Efficacy: Conformance to ANSI/AAMI ST55 (Tabletop Steam Sterilizers) and ANSI/AAMI ST37. (Specific quantitative criteria within these standards are not detailed in the summary.) | Successful sterilization was achieved in all three validations conducted. |
Handpiece Cycle Validation: Conformance with FDA Draft Guidance Document on Dental Handpieces (1995) and Guidance on Premarket Notification Submissions for Sterilizers Intended for Use in Health Care Facilities (1993). (Specific quantitative criteria from these guidances are not detailed in the summary.) | Successful sterilization was achieved for handpiece cycle validation. |
Functionality/Safety: Door interlocking device prevents manual opening until chamber pressure decreases; indicator lights for waste tank/water supply; controls preventing cycle until drained; cycle parameter display. | These features "demonstrate safety as well as the efficiency of the unit." (No quantitative performance metrics provided for these features.) |
Drying Efficacy: Superior and rapid drying for all loads, integral sterile drying in 30-40 minute cycle for packs, bagged instruments, and wrapped instrument sets. | "The Harvey® PV Dry provides superior performance... and superior and rapid drying for all loads." "Integral sterile drying in a 30-40 minute cycle." (The studies confirm this achievement, but no specific metrics like residual moisture percentage are provided in the summary.) |
2. Sample size used for the test set and the data provenance (e.g. country of origin of the data, retrospective or prospective)
- Sample Size for Test Set: Not specified in the provided text. The text mentions "all three validations" but does not quantify the number of cycles, loads, or biological indicators used within those validations.
- Data Provenance (Country of Origin): Validation studies were conducted by SPS Medical Supply Corporation, located at 6789 West Henrietta Road, Rush, NY 14543, USA.
- Retrospective or Prospective: Not explicitly stated, but validation studies for new medical devices are typically prospective.
3. Number of experts used to establish the ground truth for the test set and the qualifications of those experts (e.g. radiologist with 10 years of experience)
- This information is not applicable and not provided. The ground truth for sterilizers is typically established through the use of biological indicators and physiochemical indicators, designed to confirm microbial inactivation, rather than expert interpretation of data points.
4. Adjudication method (e.g. 2+1, 3+1, none) for the test set
- This information is not applicable and not provided. Sterilization validation does not typically involve expert adjudication in the same way as diagnostic imaging studies. The outcome is determined by the growth or non-growth of biological indicators and readings from chemical/physical indicators.
5. If a multi-reader multi-case (MRMC) comparative effectiveness study was done, If so, what was the effect size of how much human readers improve with AI vs without AI assistance
- This information is not applicable and not provided. This is a sterilizer, not an AI-assisted diagnostic device that would involve human readers.
6. If a standalone (i.e. algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) was done
- This information is not applicable and not provided. This is a standalone medical device (sterilizer), but the concept of "algorithm only" and "human-in-the-loop" performance doesn't apply in the context of a steam sterilizer validation in the way it would for AI/software devices. The sterilizer operates autonomously through its programmed cycles.
7. The type of ground truth used (expert consensus, pathology, outcomes data, etc)
- The ground truth for sterilization efficacy is established by biological indicators (containing highly resistant bacterial spores), which, when processed in a sterilizer cycle, are subsequently incubated to determine if all spores have been killed. A lack of growth confirms sterilization. Additionally, chemical and physical indicators are used to confirm critical sterilization parameters (temperature, pressure, time, steam penetration).
8. The sample size for the training set
- This information is not applicable and not provided. Sterilizers are validated based on performance testing against standards, not typically "trained" using data sets in the way AI algorithms are.
9. How the ground truth for the training set was established
- This information is not applicable and not provided (see point 8).
Ask a specific question about this device
Page 1 of 1