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510(k) Data Aggregation
(86 days)
gammaCore Sapphire
The gammaCore Sapphire Non-invasive Vagus Nerve Stimulator is intended to provide non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) on the side of the neck. The gammaCore Sapphire device is indicated for:
- · The preventive treatment of migraine headache in adolescent (aged 12 and older) and adult patients
- The acute treatment of pain associated with migraine headache in adolescents (aged 12 and older) and adult patients
- · Adjunctive use for the preventive treatment of cluster headache in adult patients
- · The acute treatment of pain associated with episodic cluster headache in adult patients
- · Treatment of hemicrania continua in adults
- · Treatment of paroxysmal hemicrania in adults
The gammaCore Sapphire (gammaCore) is a multi-use, handheld, rechargeable, portable device consisting of a rechargeable battery and signal-generating and -amplifying electronics, with a slide control switch for user/operator control of the signal amplitude (relative range, 0-40 continuous).
The gammaCore Sapphire:
- . Includes a charging station incorporated into the "clamshell" storage case connected to a power adapter for charging of the device as necessary by the end user.
- Provides visible (light and display) and audible (beep) feedback regarding device and stimulation . status.
- Allows for multiple stimulations or doses; each stimulation or dose lasts 120 seconds, after . which the device automatically turns off unless turned off earlier by the user/operator. Note: One dose is defined as one stimulation cycle lasting 120 seconds (2 minutes).
- Delivers up to a fixed number of doses within a 24-hour period; once the maximum daily number . of doses has been reached, the device will not deliver any more doses until the following 24-hour period.
- Indicates on the display the number of remaining doses available in a 24-hour period.
The device will be provided to the patient/user with an initial 10-, 31-, or 93-day RFID card on the basis of the health care provider's prescription. Additional (refill/reload) cards will be provided in response to a user/patient request based on a prescription from his or her health care provider. The refill/reload RFID cards will be programmed by electroCore or its authorized agent. This is a specialized application for dispensing the device therapy.
When a 10-, 31-, or 93-day refill/reload card is requested by a patient/user (in accordance with a prescription from a health care provider) for a unique device serial number, an RFID card is encoded with the appropriate dosage according to the prescription. The gammaCore RFID card-loading application uses a proprietary encoding algorithm to encrypt the therapy days and doses per day on the refill/reload RFID card using near field communication protocols.
The encoded refill/reload RFID card is then provided to the user/patient who requested the refil/reload of the device, along with 1 to 6 additional tubes of conductive gel (the number of conductive gel tubes provided is based on the 10-, 31-, or 93-day refill/reload being provided). On receipt of the RFID card, the user/patient refills/reloads his or her gammaCore device by placing the RFID card across the face of the device (with the device turned on). The device will display "rd" and the "refill" icon as the device reads the RFID card. The device will signal (beeping twice) when it has been loaded with the programmed doses. The device will now be ready for use as treatment. The RFID card can be used for only one refill/reload; upon completion of the device refill/reload, the card can be thrown away.
In addition, a Bluetooth® feature will be enabled to facilitate diagnostics of any devices returned by patients/users to the manufacturer, to allow determination of the number of days the device was used and/or the number of doses as well as any days/doses remaining on the device. The Bluetooth feature will not be accessible to the patient/user; it is accessible only to the device manufacturer.
The subject device delivers the same energy and maintains the same operational characteristics as the gammaCore Sapphire device cleared in K203546. No changes in design or manufacturing process have been made that could affect device functionality. All functional aspects of the device remain the same as K203546, including the strength and nature of the device outputs.
The provided document is a 510(k) summary for the gammaCore Sapphire device, which is an external vagal nerve stimulator. It focuses on demonstrating substantial equivalence to a predicate device (gammaCore Sapphire, K203546) rather than detailing a study that proves the device meets specific acceptance criteria based on performance.
The submission is for an expanded labeling (additional indications for use), and the key argument for substantial equivalence is that the technology of the device itself is identical to the previously cleared predicate device. Therefore, no new performance testing or clinical studies were conducted to prove the device meets new acceptance criteria for its core technical performance. Instead, the "study" proving its acceptance is the demonstration that the expanded indications are supported by existing clinical data and that the device remains safe and effective for these new uses, given its proven performance characteristics.
Here's how to break down the information based on your request, focusing on the expanded indications rather than new hardware performance metrics:
1. Table of Acceptance Criteria and Reported Device Performance
Since this is a submission based on substantial equivalence for expanded indications and not a new device with novel performance criteria, the "acceptance criteria" are implicitly tied to demonstrating that the device is as safe and effective as a legally marketed predicate for the new indications.
Acceptance Criteria Category | Specific Criteria (Implicit for Substantial Equivalence) | Reported Device Performance / Evidence Provided |
---|---|---|
Technological Characteristics | - Identical waveform/frequency to predicate | "Sinusoidal wave, symmetrical biphasic 5000-Hz pulses at a rate of 25 Hz" (Same as predicate) |
- Identical maximum output to predicate | "30 V (peak), 60 mA(peak)" (Same as predicate) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
- Identical load impedance to predicate | "450-550 ohms" (Same as predicate) | |
- Identical power supply to predicate | "3V LiFePo4 battery" (Same as predicate) | |
- Identical service life to predicate | "3 years from date of manufacture" (Same as predicate) | |
- Identical patient-contacting materials to predicate | "SS, ABS-PC, SignaGel electrode gel" (Same as predicate) | |
Safety | - No new issues of safety or effectiveness | "The subject device delivers the same energy and maintains the same operational characteristics as the gammaCore Sapphire device cleared in K203546. No changes in design or manufacturing process have been made that could affect device functionality. All functional aspects of the device remain the same... No serious or unexpected adverse events were reported [in clinical data related to new indications]." |
Effectiveness for Expanded Indications | - Clinical support for new indications (Hemicrania Continua, Paroxysmal Hemicrania) | Clinical data extrapolated from RCTs for cluster headache (DEN150048 and K182369), and collected from clinical audits and case series/case reports. "Fifteen of the 19 patients with hemicrania continua (79%) and 11 of the 14 patients with paroxysmal hemicrania experienced clinically meaningful benefits with nVNS therapy..." (References 5-10 listed). |
Intended Use Relationship | - Consistent with predicate's intended use | "The gammaCore Sapphire is a device that provides nVNS when applied to the side of the neck... Same; no change in intended use." The new indications are a logical expansion within the existing mechanism of action. |
2. Sample Size Used for the Test Set and Data Provenance
The "test set" in this context refers to the clinical data used to support the expanded indications, as no new hardware performance tests were conducted.
- Sample Size:
- Hemicrania Continua: 19 patients across various clinical audits and case series/case reports.
- Paroxysmal Hemicrania: 14 patients across various clinical audits and case series/case reports.
- Data Provenance: The document does not explicitly state the country of origin for the clinical audits and case series/reports. The references include publications in international journals (e.g., Cephalalgia, Headache, J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, J Headache Pain, JAMA Neurol), suggesting a multi-national or at least broader clinical context. The data is presented as a combination of extrapolated data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) (for cluster headache, DEN150048 and K182369) and retrospective clinical audits and case series/case reports.
3. Number of Experts Used to Establish the Ground Truth for the Test Set and Qualifications of Those Experts
- The document does not specify the number of experts or their qualifications involved in establishing the "ground truth" for the case series/audits. It refers to published literature (references 5-10) which would inherently involve clinical diagnoses made by medical professionals (neurologists, headache specialists). The diagnoses of hemicrania continua and paroxysmal hemicrania themselves serve as the "ground truth" for these conditions, and their treatment response to nVNS is observed.
4. Adjudication Method for the Test Set
- The document does not describe an explicit adjudication method (e.g., 2+1, 3+1) for the clinical data from the case series/audits. These are real-world observational data and published case series, where patient outcomes are typically evaluated by the treating clinician(s) and potentially reviewed by the authors of the respective papers. The RCT data (for cluster headache) would have had their own internal adjudication processes, but these details are not provided here as the data is "extrapolated."
5. If a Multi-Reader Multi-Case (MRMC) Comparative Effectiveness Study Was Done, and Effect Size of How Much Human Readers Improve with AI vs. Without AI Assistance
- No, an MRMC comparative effectiveness study was not done. This device is a direct treatment device, not an AI-assisted diagnostic tool for human readers. Therefore, this type of study is not applicable.
6. If a Standalone (i.e., algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) Was Done
- This is a medical device for direct patient treatment, not a diagnostic algorithm. Therefore, "standalone performance" in the context of an algorithm or AI is not applicable. The device itself performs the function (nerve stimulation).
7. The Type of Ground Truth Used
- The ground truth for the expanded indications (hemicrania continua and paroxysmal hemicrania) is based on clinical diagnoses of these conditions and patient-reported (or clinician-observed) outcomes reflecting "clinically meaningful benefits" from nVNS therapy (e.g., decreases in pain severity, reductions in frequency/severity/duration of attacks). This is essentially outcomes data from real-world clinical experience and existing published literature.
8. The Sample Size for the Training Set
- This submission describes a medical device, not an AI/ML algorithm that requires a "training set" in the computational sense. Therefore, the concept of a training set sample size is not applicable to this 510(k) submission. The device's design and functionality were established through prior development and clearance (K203546).
9. How the Ground Truth for the Training Set Was Established
- As explained above, there is no "training set" in the context of an AI/ML device. The "ground truth" for the device's original design and safety/effectiveness (as detailed in the predicate K203546) would have been established through a combination of engineering validation, non-clinical testing, and clinical studies for the original indications. The current submission simply leverages that established ground truth and applies it to new, similar indications based on existing clinical evidence.
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(70 days)
gammaCore Sapphire
gammaCore Sapphire (non-invasive vagus nerve stimulator) is intended to provide non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) on the side of the neck. gammaCore is indicated for:
- · The preventive treatment of migraine headache in adolescent (age 12 and older) and adult patients.
- · The acute treatment of pain associated with migraine headache in adolescent (age 12 and older) and adult patients.
- · Adjunctive use for the preventive treatment of cluster headache in adult patients.
- · The acute treatment of pain associated with episodic cluster headache in adult patients.
The gammaCore Sapphire (gammaCore) is a multiuse, handheld, rechargeable, portable device consisting of a rechargeable battery and signal-generating and amplifying electronics, with a slide control switch for user/operator control of the signal amplitude (relative range, 0-40 continuous).
The gammaCore Sapphire:
- . Includes a charging station incorporated into the "clam shell" storage case connected to a power adapter for charging of the device as necessary by the end user.
- Provides visible (light and display) and audible (beep) feedback regarding device and stimulation . status.
- . Allows for multiple stimulations or doses; each stimulation or dose lasts 120 seconds, after which the device automatically turns off unless turned off earlier by the user/operator. Note: One dose is defined as one stimulation cycle lasting 120 seconds (2 minutes).
- . Delivers up to a fixed number of doses within a 24-hour period; once the maximum daily number of doses has been reached, the device will not deliver any more doses until the following 24-hour period.
- Indicates on the display the number of remaining doses available in a 24-hour period. .
The provided text describes a 510(k) summary for the gammaCore Sapphire device, which is an external vagal nerve stimulator for headache. This submission seeks to expand the indications for use to include the adolescent population for the preventive and acute treatment of migraine headache.
Based on the information provided, here's a breakdown regarding acceptance criteria and supporting studies:
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A table of acceptance criteria and the reported device performance
The document does not explicitly state acceptance criteria in terms of numerical performance metrics (e.g., sensitivity, specificity, accuracy) because this is a 510(k) submission for an expanded indication of an already cleared physical medical device, not a new AI/ML-driven diagnostic or prognostic device. The "acceptance criteria" in this context are related to demonstrating substantial equivalence to a predicate device and safety and effectiveness in the new population. The substantial equivalence comparison table (Table 1) acts as the primary "performance" comparison.
Acceptance Criteria (Implied) Reported Device Performance (Subject Device vs. Predicate) Intended Use Same Indication for Use Expanded to adolescents (age 12+) for preventive and acute migraine treatment. Supported by extrapolation from adult data and a small adolescent study. Rx vs OTC No change (Prescription use) Treatment Protocol for Migraine (Acute & Preventive) No change compared to adults (same 120-second stimulation cycle, number of stimulations, and daily schedule) Patient-Contacting Materials No change (SS, ABS-PC, SignaGel electrode gel) Electrical Classification No change (UL 60601-1 Class III Type BF Applied Part) Waveform/Frequency No change (Sinusoidal wave, symmetrical biphasic 5000-Hz pulses at 25 Hz) Maximum Output No change (30V, 60 mA peak) Load Impedance No change (450-550 ohms) Power Supply No change (3V LiFePo4 battery) Service Life No change (3 Years from date of manufacture) Controls No change (Control slide) Output Regulation No change (Device software and control slide) Device Status Display Differences in user interface that do not impact safety or effectiveness. Battery Charger No change (Qi-compatible wireless charger in clam shell storage case) RFID Refill/Reload Capability No change (Allows refilling/reloading) Device Diagnostics (Bluetooth) No change (Provides diagnostics for manufacturer) Alarm Signals No change (Start-up, Session complete, Errors/depleted battery, No doses left, Expired/no days left, Low battery, Reloading error, Card error) Display/Message No change to core output display, minor user interface differences considered not to impact safety/effectiveness. -
Sample sizes used for the test set and the data provenance
For the expansion of indications to adolescents, the primary "test set" for safety and effectiveness relied heavily on:
- Extrapolation from adult clinical data: This is clearly stated, meaning the adult data from prior studies (PRESTO, PREMIUM, EVENT) served as a large part of the basis.
- Small adolescent study: "a small study was performed evaluating the use of gamma Core Sapphire in the acute treatment of migraine in adolescent population. As described in Grazzi et al¹, in nine (9) adolescents, 46.8% of treated migraine attacks were considered successfully treated and did not require any rescue medication."
- Sample size for adolescent study: 9 adolescents.
- Data provenance: The Grazzi et al. study is a published peer-reviewed paper (Neurol Sci. 2017 May). The document does not specify the country of origin for the Grazzi study, but typically these are international clinical trials. It is a prospective study as it evaluates the use in a group of adolescents.
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Number of experts used to establish the ground truth for the test set and the qualifications of those experts
This information is not provided in the 510(k) summary. For a device like nVNS, the efficacy is typically self-reported by patients (e.g., pain reduction, headache freedom) and assessed by clinicians based on established diagnostic criteria for migraine. The Grazzi et al. paper would contain specifics on patient selection and outcome assessment, but that detail is not within this 510(k) summary. Given it's a treatment device, "ground truth" would be clinical outcomes (e.g., headache resolution) rather than an expert-adjudicated label on an image.
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Adjudication method for the test set
Not applicable in the context of this device. Adjudication methods like 2+1 or 3+1 are common in image-based AI studies where expert consensus is needed to establish a definitive diagnosis for a test image. Here, clinical outcomes are measured after device use.
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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
No MRMC comparative effectiveness study was done, as this is not an AI-assisted diagnostic device. It is a physical neuromodulation device. Therefore, no information on human reader improvement with AI assistance is applicable or provided.
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If a standalone (i.e., algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) was done
Not applicable. The gammaCore Sapphire is a physical device that delivers therapy and is used by a human patient. It does not operate as a standalone algorithm or AI.
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The type of ground truth used
The ground truth for the effectiveness of the device in the expanded indication (adolescents) is based on:
- Clinical Outcomes Data: Self-reported pain relief and resolution of migraine symptoms, as well as the absence of requiring rescue medication. The Grazzi et al. study reported "46.8% of treated migraine attacks were considered successfully treated and did not require any rescue medication."
- Adult Clinical Trial Results: The prior 510(k)s (K173442, K191830) relied on outcomes from multi-center, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled clinical studies (PRESTO, PREMIUM, EVENT) for adults.
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The sample size for the training set
Not explicitly applicable in the context of this device because it's not an AI/ML algorithm that is "trained" on data in the traditional sense. The device's technological characteristics are fixed. The clinical studies (PRESTO, PREMIUM, EVENT, and the Grazzi et al. study) provide the evidence base that informed the safety and effectiveness, rather than a "training set" for an algorithm. The total sample sizes for these studies are not fully detailed in this 510(k) summary but would be found in the referenced prior 510(k) documents and publications. The adult studies would have had considerably larger sample sizes than the 9 adolescents mentioned.
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How the ground truth for the training set was established
Again, "training set" and "ground truth" establishment in the AI/ML sense are not directly applicable. The "ground truth" for the effectiveness shown in the supporting clinical studies (for both adults and adolescents) was established through clinical trial methodology:
- Randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled study designs comparing the device to a sham control.
- Measurement of defined clinical endpoints, such as pain reduction, headache freedom, and reduction in headache frequency.
- Reporting of adverse events to assess safety.
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(261 days)
gammaCore Sapphire
The gammaCore Sapphire Non-invasive Vagus Nerve Stimulator is intended to provide non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) on the side of the neck. The gammaCore Sapphire device is indicated for:
- · Adjunctive use for the preventive treatment of cluster headache in adult patients.
- · The acute treatment of pain associated with episodic cluster headache in adult patients.
- · The acute treatment of pain associated with migraine headache in adult patients.
- · The preventive treatment of migraine headache in adult patients.
The gammaCore Sapphire (gammaCore) is a multiuse, handheld, rechargeable, portable device consisting of a rechargeable battery and signal-generating and amplifying electronics, with a slide control switch for user/operator control of the signal amplitude (relative range, 0-40 continuous).
The gammaCore Sapphire:
- . Includes a charging station incorporated into the "clam shell" storage case connected to a power adapter for charging of the device as necessary by the end user.
- Provides visible (light and display) and audible (beep) feedback regarding device and . stimulation status.
- Allows for multiple stimulations or doses; each stimulation or dose lasts 120 seconds, . after which the device automatically turns off unless turned off earlier by the user/operator.
- Delivers up to a fixed number of doses within a 24-hour period; once the maximum daily . number of doses has been reached, the device will not deliver any more doses until the following 24-hour period.
- Indicates on the display the number of remaining doses available in a 24-hour period. .
This document is a 510(k) summary for the gammaCore Sapphire device and doesn't explicitly state "acceptance criteria" in a quantitative table. Instead, it demonstrates substantial equivalence to a predicate device by proving that the expansion of indications for use (specifically, for the preventive treatment of migraine headache) does not raise new questions of safety or effectiveness.
The "acceptance criteria" effectively are that the new indication performs similarly in terms of safety and efficacy to the existing cleared indications and comparable to the predicate device, as demonstrated through clinical studies.
Here's a breakdown of the requested information based on the provided text:
1. Table of Acceptance Criteria and Reported Device Performance
As noted, the document doesn't provide a formal table of "acceptance criteria" and "reported device performance" in the typical sense of a pass/fail metric for a specific algorithm. Instead, it presents clinical study results to demonstrate that the expanded indication for the gammaCore Sapphire device (preventive treatment of migraine headache) is safe and effective and does not raise new questions of safety or effectiveness compared to the predicate device and previously cleared indications.
The key "performance" is the therapeutic gain and P-value for migraine reduction and the safety profile demonstrated in the clinical trials.
Acceptance Criteria (Inferred from Substantial Equivalence Claim) | Reported Device Performance (from Clinical Studies) |
---|---|
No new safety concerns for nVNS use in the intended population. | In both PREMIUM and EVENT studies, nVNS was safe and well tolerated. No serious device-related adverse events (AEs) were reported. Most adverse events were mild or moderate and transient. |
Non-inferior efficacy for preventive migraine treatment. | PREMIUM Study (mITT population for preventive migraine): |
- Therapeutic gain in mean reduction of migraine days per month: -0.74 (P=0.043)
- Therapeutic gain in mean reduction of headache days per month: -0.86 (P=0.045)
- Therapeutic gain in mean reduction of acute medication days per month: -0.80 (P=0.039)
EVENT Study (for preventive chronic migraine):
- Change in mean headache days from baseline to month 2: -1.4 (nVNS) vs. -0.2 (sham)
- Continued nVNS use led to significant reductions over time. |
| Technological characteristics, intended use, and other device specifications remain unchanged or demonstrably equivalent. | "There have been no changes in the technological characteristics or intended use of the gammaCore Sapphire in the proposed Indications for Use statement."
(Detailed comparison in Table 5 showing no changes in patient-contacting materials, electrical classification, waveform/frequency, maximum output, load impedance, power supply, service life, controls, output regulation, display, charger, RFID, Bluetooth, and alarm signals). |
2. Sample Size Used for the Test Set and Data Provenance
The "test set" in this context refers to the clinical study populations used to support the expanded indication.
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PREMIUM Study:
- ITT (Intent-to-treat) Population: 332 subjects (ITT nVNS: 165, ITT Sham: 167)
- mITT (modified Intent-to-treat) Population: 278 subjects (mITT nVNS: 138, mITT Sham: 140)
- Data Provenance: Prospective, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled, multicenter study conducted at 22 European sites from June 1, 2015, to November 21, 2017.
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EVENT Study:
- ITT (Intent-to-treat) Population: 59 subjects (ITT nVNS: 30, ITT Sham: 29)
- PP (Per-protocol) Population: 49 subjects (PP nVNS: 26, PP Sham: 23)
- Data Provenance: Prospective, randomized, sham-controlled, multicenter pilot study for the prevention of chronic migraine, conducted at 6 sites in the United States from October 2012 to April 2014.
3. Number of Experts Used to Establish the Ground Truth for the Test Set and Qualifications of Those Experts
Clinical trials for medical devices like this typically rely on patient-reported outcomes validated by medical professionals and objective measures (like headache day diaries). The "ground truth" here is less about image interpretation by experts and more about the clinical definition of migraine, headache days, and adverse events, as assessed by the investigators and patients themselves.
The document does not specify a separate panel of experts establishing ground truth in the way it might for an AI-powered diagnostic device. Instead, the "ground truth" for efficacy (e.g., reduction in migraine days) is derived from the comprehensive data collected during the trials, including patient diaries and clinical assessments by the investigators at the study sites. The inclusion criteria for patients required a diagnosis of migraine with or without aura in accordance with international classification criteria (ICHD-3 Beta for PREMIUM, ICHD-2 for EVENT), implying that the diagnosing clinicians (experts) established the baseline condition.
4. Adjudication Method for the Test Set
This type of information (e.g., 2+1, 3+1 adjudication) is typically relevant for studies where subjective assessments (like imaging reads) require a consensus for ground truth. For a clinical trial involving patient symptoms and objective measurements, this type of adjudication method is generally not applicable. The studies were randomized, sham-controlled, and double-blind, which are methods designed to reduce bias in treatment efficacy evaluation.
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
No, an MRMC comparative effectiveness study was not done. This device is a therapeutic stimulation device, not an AI-powered diagnostic tool requiring human reader assistance.
6. If a Standalone (i.e., algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) Was Done
This question is not applicable. The gammaCore Sapphire is a non-invasive vagus nerve stimulator, a physical device used by patients under a prescription, not an algorithm. The "performance" is the physiological effect of the stimulation.
7. The Type of Ground Truth Used
The "ground truth" for the efficacy endpoints was based on:
- Patient-reported outcomes: Primarily the number of migraine days per month, headache days per month, and acute medication days per month, typically recorded in diaries.
- Clinical assessment: Diagnosis of migraine based on established International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD) criteria by trained clinicians at the study sites.
- Safety monitoring: Assessment of adverse events by investigators.
8. The Sample Size for the Training Set
There isn't a "training set" in the context of an algorithm or AI. The device itself is a physical medical device. The "training" that occurs is the patient's and clinician's understanding of how to use the device, not an algorithmic learning process. The clinical studies described (PREMIUM and EVENT) serve as the validation datasets for safety and efficacy for the expanded indication.
9. How the Ground Truth for the Training Set Was Established
Not applicable, as there is no algorithmic "training set" for this device.
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(88 days)
gammaCore Sapphire
gammaCore Sapphire (non-invasive vagus nerve stimulator) is intended to provide non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) on the side of the neck. gammaCore is indicated for:
- · Adjunctive use for the preventive treatment of cluster headache in adult patients.
- · The acute treatment of pain associated with episodic cluster headache in adult patients.
- · The acute treatment of pain associated with migraine headache in adult patients.
The gammaCore Sapphire (gammaCore) is a multiuse, handheld, rechargeable, portable device consisting of a rechargeable battery and signal-generating and amplifying electronics, with a slide control switch for user/operator control of the signal amplitude (relative range, 0-40 continuous).
The gammaCore Sapphire:
- . Includes a charging station incorporated into the "clam shell" storage case connected to a power adapter for charging of the device as necessary by the end user.
- . Provides visible (light and display) and audible (beep) feedback regarding device and stimulation status.
- . Allows for multiple stimulations or doses; each stimulation or dose lasts 120 seconds, after which the device automatically turns off unless turned off earlier by the user/operator. Note: One dose is defined as one stimulation cycle lasting 120 seconds (2 minutes).
- . Delivers up to a fixed number of doses within a 24-hour period; once the maximum daily number of doses has been reached, the device will not deliver any more doses until the following 24-hour period.
- Indicates on the display the number of remaining doses available in a 24-hour period. ●
The provided documentation describes the gammaCore Sapphire (non-invasive vagus nerve stimulator), which is indicated for:
- Adjunctive use for the preventive treatment of cluster headache in adult patients.
- The acute treatment of pain associated with episodic cluster headache in adult patients.
- The acute treatment of pain associated with migraine headache in adult patients.
The information primarily focuses on demonstrating substantial equivalence to predicate devices rather than defining specific acceptance criteria for performance benchmarks against a gold standard for a diagnostic AI device. However, based on the clinical study presented, we can infer a primary efficacy outcome as an "acceptance criteria" and the reported device performance from that study.
Here's the breakdown of the requested information:
1. Table of Acceptance Criteria and Reported Device Performance
Acceptance Criteria (Inferred from Primary Endpoint) | Reported Device Performance (SoC + nVNS group vs. Control) |
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Significantly greater reduction in the mean number of Cluster Headache (CH) attacks per week. | Study Outcome: Mean reduction of 5.9 CH attacks per week for SoC + nVNS vs. 2.1 for Control. |
Therapeutic Gain: 3.9 fewer attacks per week (95% CI: 0.5, 7.2; P=0.02). | |
Higher 50% responder rates (proportion of subjects with ≥50% reduction in CH attacks). | Study Outcome: 40% responder rate for SoC + nVNS vs. 8.3% for Control (P |
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(30 days)
gammaCore Sapphire
The gammaCore Sapphire Non-invasive Vagus Nerve Stimulator is intended to provide noninvasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) on the side of the neck. The gammaCore is indicated for the acute treatment of pain associated with episodic cluster headache in adult patients.
gammaCore Sapphire (gammaCore), like the predicate gammaCore-2 device, is a multi-use, hand-held, rechargeable, portable device consisting of a rechargeable battery, signal generating and amplifying electronics, with a slide control switch for user / operator control of the signal amplitude (relative range 0-40 continuous). Like gammaCore-2, gammaCore Sapphire:
- includes a charging station incorporated into the "clam shell" storage case connected to a power adapter to charge the device as necessary by the end user
- provides visible (light and display) and audible feedback (beep) regarding device and . stimulation status
- allows for multiple stimulations or doses. Each stimulation or dose lasts 120 . seconds, after which the device automatically turns off, unless turned off earlier by the user / operator
- . delivers a fixed number of doses within a 24-hour period. Once the maximum daily number of doses has been reached, the device will not deliver any more doses until the following 24-hour period.
- the number of remaining doses available in a 24-hour period is indicated on the . Display.
In comparison to the gammaCore-2 predicate K172270 (programmed by the manufacturer to deliver 24 doses per day up to a maximum of 99 days), gammaCore Sapphire can be programmed to deliver 24 doses per day for 10, 31, or 93 days and can be refilled / reloaded for additional 10, 31, or 93 day periods via an RFID card encoded and provided by electroCore or its authorized agent.
This document is a 510(k) Summary for the gammaCore Sapphire device, which is an external vagus nerve stimulator for headache. It focuses on demonstrating substantial equivalence to a predicate device (gammaCore-2) rather than presenting a novel device's performance data against acceptance criteria from a clinical study. Therefore, most of the requested information regarding acceptance criteria and a study proving the device meets them (especially in the context of clinical efficacy) is not present in this document.
The document highlights non-clinical testing to demonstrate that the modifications to the device are safe and effective, focusing on the RFID refill functionality.
Here's a breakdown of what can and cannot be extracted from the provided text:
Preamble: The document states, "The verification and validation activities, as identified by the risk analysis to ensure that the modified device is as safe and effective as the predicate device, have been completed and demonstrate that the predetermined acceptance criteria have been met." However, it does not provide the specific acceptance criteria or the detailed results of these verification and validation activities.
1. A table of acceptance criteria and the reported device performance
- Not explicitly provided. The document states that "predetermined acceptance criteria have been met" for non-clinical testing related to the modifications (RFID refill functionality), but it does not list these criteria or the performance results. The focus is on demonstrating that the modification doesn't negatively impact safety or effectiveness compared to the predicate, not on a new clinical performance study.
2. Sample sized used for the test set and the data provenance (e.g. country of origin of the data, retrospective or prospective)
- Not applicable for a clinical test set. The document refers to "verification and validation activities" for non-clinical aspects (e.g., RFID functionality). No clinical test set data is provided.
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)
- Not applicable. This relates to clinical studies establishing ground truth, which were not conducted for this 510(k) submission regarding the device modifications.
4. Adjudication method (e.g. 2+1, 3+1, none) for the test set
- Not applicable. This relates to clinical studies and ground truth establishment, which were not performed in this context.
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
- No, a MRMC comparative effectiveness study was not done. This is a modification to an existing device (gammaCore-2 to gammaCore Sapphire), and the submission states: "Clinical Data: Clinical studies were not required to validate the modifications in the gammaCore Sapphire." Therefore, there's no data on human reader improvement with AI assistance. The device is a stimulator, not an AI diagnostic tool.
6. If a standalone (i.e. algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) was done
- Not applicable. This device is a medical stimulator, not an algorithm, so "standalone performance" in the context of an algorithm is not relevant here. The device itself operates "standalone" in delivering stimulation.
7. The type of ground truth used (expert consensus, pathology, outcomes data, etc)
- Not applicable. This relates to clinical studies. For the non-clinical "verification and validation activities," the "ground truth" would be engineering specifications and functional performance (e.g., does the RFID card successfully load the correct number of doses, is the Bluetooth feature accessible only by the manufacturer, etc.). No clinical ground truth on patient outcomes is presented for a new study.
8. The sample size for the training set
- Not applicable. This is for machine learning models. This document describes a medical device, not an AI algorithm.
9. How the ground truth for the training set was established
- Not applicable. This is for machine learning models.
Summary of what the document DOES state regarding studies:
- Nonclinical Testing: "The verification and validation activities, as identified by the risk analysis to ensure that the modified device is as safe and effective as the predicate device, have been completed and demonstrate that the predetermined acceptance criteria have been met." This implies internal engineering and functional testing, not clinical studies.
- Clinical Data: "Clinical studies were not required to validate the modifications in the gammaCore Sapphire." This is a key point, meaning no new clinical trials were conducted to support this 510(k) submission for the device modifications. The substantial equivalence relies on the predicate device's existing clinical evidence and the non-clinical testing of the modifications.
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