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510(k) Data Aggregation
(405 days)
Hip Products: Trinity Acetabular System, Trinity PLUS Acetabular Shell, MetaFix Hip System, TriFit
The BiPolar-i is intended for use in the following indications: Non-inflammatory degencrative joint disease including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis in which the acetabulum does not require replacement, Treatment of non-union, femoral neck and trochanteric fractures of the proximal femur, Revision of failed partial hip replacements in which the acetabulum does not require replacement. The BiPolar-i is indicated for cementless use only.
The Trinity Acetabular System is indicated for use in non-intlammatory degenerative joint disease including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis, rheumatoid arthritis, correctional deformity, developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) or congenital dysplasia of the hip (CDH). The Trinity Acctabular System is intended for cementless, single use only.
The indications for the Corin MctaFixM Hip Stem as a total hip arthroplasty, and when used in combination with a Corin hemi arthroplasty head, as a hip hemi-arthroplasty, include: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis, Rheumatoid arthritis, Correction of functional deformity, Treatment of non-union and femoral neck fractures, Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) and congenital dysplasia of the hip (CDH). The Corin MetaFixTM Hip Stem is indicated for cementless use only.
The indications for the MiniHip Stem as a total hip arthroplasty include: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease including osteoarthriis and avascular necrosis Rheumatoid arthritis Correction of functional deformity. Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) and congenital dysplasia of the hiniHip Stem is indicated for cementless use only.
The indications for the TrinityTM Accabular System as a total hip arthroplasty include: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis, Rheunatoid arthritis, Correction of functional deformity, Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH), and congenital dysplasia of the hip (CDH). The Trinity Acctabular System is intended for cementless, single use only.
The Trinity Dual Mobility System is intended for use in the following indications: 1. Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease, including osteoarthritis & avascular necrosis 2. Rheumatoid Arthritis 3. Correction of functional deformity 4. Revision of previously failed total hip arthroplasty 5. Patients at increased risk of dislocation 6. Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). The Trinity TM Dual Mobility System is indicated for cementless use only.
The indications for the Corin Trinity™ PLUS Accabular Shell as a total hip arthroplasty include: Non-inflammalory degenerative joint disease including ostoarthritis and avascular necrosis. Rheumatoid arthritis. Correction of functional deformity, Revision of previously failed total hip arthroplasty, Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). The Trinity TM PLUS Acctabular Shell is indicated for cement less use only.
The MobiliT Cup, for cemented and cementless use, are indicated for primary replacement of the hip joint: - In degenerative pathologies: primary, secondary or post-traumatic osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis - For patients who have a high risk of dislocation - In cases of necrosis of the femoral head - In cases of fracture of the neck of the femur - In cases of congenital luxation. The MobiliT Cup, for cemented and cementless use, are indicated for revision when the bone tissue remains sufficient after the removal of the previous acetabular cup. The cementless MobiliT standard Cup, with flanges or with flanges and hook are indicated for cementless use only. The cemented MobiliT Cup is indicated for cemented use only.
The Apex Hip System Bipolar Head is intended for use in combination with an Apex Hip System for uncemented primary or revision hemiarthroplasty of the hip. This prosthesis may be used for the following conditions, as appropriate: Femoral neck and trochanteric fractures of the proximal femur. Osteonecrosis of the femoral head, Revision procedures where other devices or treatments for these indications have failed.
The OMNI Hip system Ceramic Femoral Heads are intended for use in combination with the OMNI Hip System Stems as the femoral component in total hip replacement procedures. This ceramic head is intended to articulate with the OMNI Interface Acctabular System or bipolar component. This prosthesis is intended for single use may be used for the following conditions, as appropriate: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease, including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis; Rheumatoid arthritis; Correction of functional deformity; Congenital dislocation; Revision procedures where other treatments or devices have failed; Femoral neck and trochanteric fiactures of the proximal femur.
The indications for use of the OMNI Modular Hip Stems in hip arthroplasty include the following conditions, as appropriate: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease, including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis; Rheumatoid arthritis: Correction of functional deformity; Congenital dislocation: Revision procedures where other treatments or devices have failed; Femoral neck and trochanteric fractures of the proximal femur. The OMNI Modular Hip stems are indicated for cementless use only and single use implantation.
The indications for use of the OMNI Modular Hip Stems in hip arthroplasty include the following conditions, as appropriate: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease, including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis; Rheumatoid arthritis: Correction of functional deformity; Congenital dislocation: Revision procedures where other treatments or devices have failed; Femoral neck and trochanteric fractures of the proximal femur. The OMNI Modular Hip stems are indicated for cementless use only and single use implantation.
The Revival Modular Revision Hip Stem is indicated in revision surgery of femoral components, following failure of primary cemented or un-cemented prosthesis. The REVIVAL™ Hip Stem 100mm distal component is also indicated in primary total hip arthroplasty. The indications for the Revival TM Modular Revision Hip Stem include: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease including primary and secondary osteoarthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis, Correction of functional deformity, Treatment of non-union and femoral neck fractment of traumatic dislocations of the hip, Failures of osteotomy, Treatment of arthrodesis. The Revival ™ Revision Hip Stem is indicated for cementless, single use only.
TaperFirM Hip Stem is indicated for the relief of pain and restoration following the effects of femoral neck fracture, osteo, theumatory arthritis, post- traumatic disease effects, avascular necrosis and total hip revision. The Taper it Hip Stem is indicated for hemi-arthroplasty when used in combination with Corin hemiarthroplasty femoral heads. The TaperFitTM Hip Stem is indicated for cemented, single use only.
The indications for use of the K 1 Hip arthroplasty include the following conditions, as appropriate: Noninflammatory degenerative joint disease, including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis: Rheumatoid arthritis: Correction of functional deformity: Congenital disfocation: Revision procedures where other treatments or devices have failed; Femoral neck and trochanteric fractures of the proximal femur. The K 1 Hip Stem is indicated for cementless use only and single use implantation.
The indications for the TriFit CF Hip Stem as a total hip arthroplasty and as a hip hemiarthroplasty include: Noninflammatory degenerative joint disease including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis, Rheumatoid arthritis, Correction of functional deformity, Treatment of non-union and femoral neck fractures, Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip (DDH), Previously failed hip surgery. The Trifit CF Hip Stem is indicated for cementless use only.
The indications for the Corin TriFit TSTM Hip atthroplasty, and when used in combination with a Corin hemi arthroplasty head, as a hip hemi-arthroplasty, include: Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease including osteoadhritis and avascular necrosis, Rheumatoid arthritis, Correction of functional deformity, Treatment of non-union, femoral neck and trochanteric fractures of the proximal femur, Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) or congenital dysplasia of the hip (CDH). The Tril'it TS Hip is intended for cementless use only.
The subject and predicate devices are one in the same and are comprised of several legally marketed Corin Ltd. hip products, which include OMNIIfe Sciences and Apex Surgical hip products. The subject devices include acetabular cups and liners, bone fixation screws, screw hole occluders, cemented and cementless femoral hip stems for primary and revision hip arthroplasty, fixation screws, modular necks, CoCrMo alloy and ceramic femoral heads, dual mobility acetabular systems, and bipolar heads. The purpose of this 510(k) is to notify the FDA of Corin's engineering assessment of the cross-compatibility of the subject devices, identification of conflicts, and updates to the product labeling. The subject hip devices components are manufactured from a variety of materials which include cobalt-chromium-molybdenum alloy, stainless steel alloy, unalloyed titanium, calcium phosphate (Bonit™ coating) Alumina Matrix Composite ceramic (Biolox Delta), and ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE), all of which conform to ASTM or ISO standards, or internal standards. The subject femoral hip stems and heads possess the same 12/14 taper design and reference system for determining head and neck offsets.
I am sorry, but the provided text does not contain information about the acceptance criteria and study proving device performance as typically seen in a medical device submission beyond general statements of substantial equivalence. The document is a 510(k) summary for hip replacement components, primarily focusing on cross-compatibility of various existing devices.
The text outlines:
- Device identification and manufacturer information.
- List of numerous predicate devices.
- Detailed descriptions of the indications for use for many hip components (e.g., Corin BiPolar-i, Trinity™ Acetabular System, MetaFix™ Hip, MiniHip™, Trinity™ Dual Mobility, MobiliT™ Cup, OMNI Bipolar Head, OMNI Delta Ceramic Femoral Head, OMNI MOD Hip System, OMNI K1/K2 Hip Systems, Revival™ Modular Hip Stem, TaperFit™, TriFit™ CF/TS Hip). These indications primarily relate to non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease, rheumatoid arthritis, correction of functional deformity, avascular necrosis, fractures, and revision surgeries.
- A "Performance Data" section which describes the types of engineering analyses and bench testing performed to establish cross-compatibility (e.g., ceramic head burst testing, head pull-off, fretting-corrosion, impingement testing, range of motion assessment, comparison of taper geometries, fatigue strength assessment, and contact stress/wear potential).
However, it does not provide:
- A specific table of acceptance criteria and reported device performance for the types of tests mentioned (e.g., what burst pressure was required vs. achieved). It only lists the types of tests done.
- Sample sizes used for test sets or data provenance.
- Number of experts and their qualifications for establishing ground truth (as this pertains to clinical studies, which are not detailed here for performance).
- Adjudication method.
- Multi-reader multi-case (MRMC) comparative effectiveness study information.
- Standalone algorithm performance (as this is not an AI/algorithm-driven device).
- Type of ground truth used (again, this is not a diagnostic device with "ground truth" in the typical sense).
- Sample size for training set.
- How ground truth for the training set was established.
The document's purpose is to demonstrate substantial equivalence of a range of hip components, including their cross-compatibility when used together. The "performance data" refers to the engineering and bench testing conducted to ensure this compatibility rather than clinical performance against specific metrics as one would find for a diagnostic or AI-driven device.
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(296 days)
Trinity PLUS Acetabular Shell
The indications for the Corin Trinity™ PLUS Acetabular Shell as a total hip arthroplasty include:
o Non-inflammatory degenerative joint disease including osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis,
o Rheumatoid arthritis,
o Correction of functional deformity,
o Revision of previously failed total hip arthroplasty
o Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH),
The Trinity™ PLUS Acetabular Shell is indicated for cementless use only.
The Trinity™ PLUS Acetabular Shell is a component of a modular cup system consisting of a hemispherical press fit, titanium alloy shell for use with cobalt chrome alloy (Dual Mobility articulations only) or polyethylene liners and a dedicated range of ceramic and cobalt chrome alloy modular 12/14 taper femoral heads providing ceramic on polyethylene and metal on polyethylene articulations for use in total hip replacement procedures using any Corin femoral stem with a 12/14 taper connection. The acetabular shell has an outer porous structure produced by additive manufacturing using titanium alloy powder (ASTM F3001). The shell is available with or without a layer of electrochemically deposited biomimetic calcium phosphate coating. The Trinity™ PLUS acetabular shell is available with or without screw holes which permit the use of dedicated titanium screws to provide additional fixation if required.
The provided text describes a 510(k) premarket notification for a hip implant device, the Corin Trinity™ PLUS Acetabular Shell. The notification focuses on demonstrating substantial equivalence to existing legally marketed predicate devices, rather than proving that the device meets specific acceptance criteria based on a study of its performance in a clinical setting against defined metrics.
Therefore, many of the requested categories (acceptance criteria, reported device performance, sample size for test set, data provenance, number of experts for ground truth, adjudication method, MRMC study, standalone performance, ground truth type, training set size, how ground truth for training set was established) are not applicable to this type of submission.
Here's a breakdown based on the information available:
1. A table of acceptance criteria and the reported device performance:
This information is not provided in the document as this is a 510(k) submission for substantial equivalence, not a clinical trial report with performance metrics. The "acceptance criteria" here are essentially proving the device is as safe and effective as predicate devices. The document details non-clinical testing to demonstrate this.
Non-Clinical Testing Conducted to Demonstrate Substantial Equivalence:
Test Category | Specific Tests | Result/Conclusion |
---|---|---|
Mechanical Tests | Static (Shear, Tensile, Compression) | Performed to show the device is comparable to predicate, within acceptable limits for intended use. |
Dynamic (Deformation, Bending Fatigue, Shear Fatigue, Range of Motion, Impingement, Shell Fatigue) | Performed to show the device is comparable to predicate, within acceptable limits for intended use. | |
Material/Structure Characterization | Porous Structure Characterization | Performed to show the device's porous structure is similar to predicate. |
Biocompatibility | Bacterial Endotoxin Testing (BET) using Limulus Amebocyte Lystate (LAL) kinetic chromogenic methodology | Conducted on finished, sterilized product, presumably to confirm endotoxin levels are within acceptable limits. |
Biological Response | Animal Data | Used to support substantial equivalence. (Specifics not detailed) |
Conclusion from Non-Clinical Testing: The culmination of the results of the mechanical testing, characterization, and animal data indicate that the devices perform within their intended use and are substantially equivalent to the predicate devices.
2. Sample size used for the test set and the data provenance (e.g. country of origin of the data, retrospective or prospective):
Not Applicable for this 510(k) submission, as it relies on non-clinical testing and comparison to predicates, not a clinical test set with human subjects. The non-clinical tests would have their own sample sizes for mechanical specimens, but these are not specified in the document.
3. Number of experts used to establish the ground truth for the test set and the qualifications of those experts:
Not Applicable. Ground truth, in the context of clinical studies, is not established for this type of submission. The "ground truth" for a 510(k) is the performance and safety profile of the predicate devices.
4. Adjudication method (e.g. 2+1, 3+1, none) for the test set:
Not Applicable. There is no clinical test set requiring adjudication in this 510(k) submission.
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:
Not Applicable. This is a medical device for total hip arthroplasty, not an AI-assisted diagnostic or imaging device for human readers. No MRMC study was conducted.
6. If a standalone (i.e. algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) was done:
Not Applicable. This is a physical implantable device, not a software algorithm.
7. The type of ground truth used (expert consensus, pathology, outcomes data, etc):
Not Applicable in the traditional sense of a clinical study. The "ground truth" for this 510(k) submission is the established safety and effectiveness of the legally marketed predicate devices, which the new device is being compared against.
8. The sample size for the training set:
Not Applicable. There is no "training set" in the context of a clinical study for this 510(k) submission. Non-clinical tests were performed on device samples.
9. How the ground truth for the training set was established:
Not Applicable. As there is no training set, there's no ground truth to establish for it in this context.
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