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510(k) Data Aggregation
(64 days)
The Rod-To-Rod Coupler is intended to form a transverse connection between spinal rods in a spinal construct in order to increase the torsional stiffness of the construct.
A construct with screws attached to the pedicles of the lumbar and sacral spine (L3 to S1) and autogenous bone graft may be used only for the treatment of severe spondylolisthesis (Grade 3 and Grade 4) at the fifth lumbar - first sacral (L5-S1) vertebral joint (see warnings below). The device is intended to be implanted using a posterior surgical approach and removed after the development of a solid fusion mass.
When not used as a pedicle screw fixation system, various combinations of the Versalok Posterior Spinal Fixation System components are also indicated to provide temporary stability of the thoracic, thoracolumbar, or lumbar spine (T1 to S1) during bony fusion healing secondary to:
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- Unstable spinal fractures (such as fracture dislocations) or instability secondary to spinal tumors;
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- Degenerative disk diseases of the spine (defined as back pain of diskogenic origin with degeneration of the disk confirmed by history and radiographic studies);
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- Spinal curvatures (such as idiopathic scoliosis, neuromuscular scoliosis/kyphoscoliosis with associated paralysis or spasticity, and secondary to spinal fractures) which are:
- . Progressive, despite other forms of treatment,
- . Detrimental to cardiopulmonary function,
- . Interfering with spinal mechanics or causing severe back pain, or
- . Cosmetically unacceptable, progressive, and painful.
The system is intended to provide temporary maintenance and support of the correction during the time normally needed for the fusion mass to mature. Use of spinal fixation instrumentation in children has been reported. Children should have adequate bony and soft tissue maturity to undergo implantation but need not have reached skeletal maturity.
The coupler is designed to form a transverse connection between spinal construct in order to increase the torsional stiffness of the construct.
The provided text describes a 510(k) premarket notification for a medical device, the Rod-To-Rod Coupler, which is part of the Versalok Posterior Spinal Fixation System. However, it does not contain explicit acceptance criteria or detailed study results in the format usually associated with a scientific study proving device performance against such criteria.
The "Testing Summary" section states: "Submitted testing demonstrates that the Rod-To-Rod Coupler fatigue performance is comparable to a predicate device and adequate for its intended use." This is a high-level summary, not a detailed report of acceptance criteria and performance data.
Therefore, many of the requested details cannot be extracted from the provided text. I will answer based on the information that is available.
1. Table of Acceptance Criteria and Reported Device Performance
Criteria Type | Acceptance Criteria | Reported Device Performance |
---|---|---|
Fatigue Performance | Not explicitly stated (implied to be comparable to predicate device for intended use) | "Comparable to a predicate device and adequate for its intended use." |
2. Sample Size Used for the Test Set and Data Provenance
Not available in the provided text. The document states "Submitted testing demonstrates...", suggesting a test was conducted, but details on sample size and data provenance are absent.
3. Number of Experts Used to Establish Ground Truth and Qualifications
Not applicable. The testing described is mechanical fatigue performance, not a clinical study requiring expert ground truth for interpretation of cases.
4. Adjudication Method
Not applicable, as it's a mechanical test, not a subjective clinical assessment.
5. Multi-Reader Multi-Case (MRMC) Comparative Effectiveness Study
No, an MRMC comparative effectiveness study was not done. The testing described is mechanical (fatigue performance).
6. Standalone (Algorithm Only Without Human-in-the-Loop) Performance
Not applicable. This is a physical medical device, not an AI algorithm. The performance testing would be of the device itself.
7. Type of Ground Truth Used
The "ground truth" for the mechanical fatigue testing would be the physical properties and performance of the device under specific test conditions, likely compared against a predicate device's known performance standards or established engineering benchmarks for spinal implants. The document implies a comparison to a "predicate device."
8. Sample Size for the Training Set
Not applicable. This is not an AI/machine learning study that would have a training set.
9. How Ground Truth for the Training Set Was Established
Not applicable.
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