Medical Devices (Post-market Surveillance Requirements) (Amendment) (Great Britain) Regulations 2024 Debate

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Medical Devices (Post-market Surveillance Requirements) (Amendment) (Great Britain) Regulations 2024

Lord Kamall Excerpts
Thursday 28th November 2024

(1 day, 22 hours ago)

Grand Committee
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In conclusion, this draft statutory instrument is timely. The growing use of innovative technologies and digital tools in the NHS has the potential to create a profound change in people’s health. This is critical to the Government’s ambition to rebuild the NHS; however, we must have effective measures in place to achieve this safely. These new regulations place patient care at the forefront. I beg to move.
Lord Kamall Portrait Lord Kamall (Con)
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My Lords, as with the previous instrument, this side welcomes the instrument being laid. Once again, the lack of people queuing up to speak in this debate demonstrates that it is relatively uncontroversial; we now outnumber the audience, as it were.

We obviously support this instrument. The Minister was absolutely right to refer to the report by the noble Baroness, Lady Cumberlege, and to the pain and misery that the valproate scandal—and other scandals—caused so many women. On that, I know that the Minister will not be able to answer me now but I wonder whether he can write to me on the recent report by the Patient Safety Commissioner. He suggested an initial sum to be paid to the victims of that scandal, as well as looking at future remedies. Are the Government any closer to considering the Patient Safety Commissioner’s recommendations? These women have suffered enough. They have been out of pocket and have suffered physically, financially and emotionally. I would welcome an answer on that at some stage, probably in writing.

It is obviously right that we increase the scope for post-market surveillance. As a quick aside, noble Lords may know that I was a Member of the European Parliament for a few years. British companies used to lobby me on their concern that manufacturers could go to certain jurisdictions to get a CE mark then sell that product across the EU; they sometimes wondered whether the surveillance or testing of that product was sufficiently strong compared to in the UK. This gives us a huge opportunity now to be more aware of CE marks. The Health and Safety Executive for Northern Ireland says that

“the CE mark is not a quality mark, nor a guarantee that the product meets all of the requirements of relevant EU product safety law”.

It places an onus on suppliers to make sure that they comply, but not every product is tested.

That is why it is important, particularly given the scandal to which the noble Baroness, Lady Cumberlege, referred in her report, that we now take the opportunity to ensure that these products are as safe as they claim to be—not only those manufactured in the UK and GB but, particularly, those coming from abroad. I want some sort of assurance that the Minister thinks this will be an effective way to make sure that we avoid that problem.

Secondly, having left the EU a few years ago, we have to be aware that there was clearly some friction. Hopefully, we will move to a better relationship between the UK and the EU. We want to avoid unnecessary conflict, but has the Minister thought about what happens when, in the post-market surveillance, the UK regulator deems that a product from an EU country which might have a CE mark is not safe? How do we ensure that that does not cause conflict with the EU regulators for that product, and is it going be a constructive relationship?

Are the EU standards organisations fully acquainted with what we will be doing here in the UK, and open to the fact that we might find that some products are not high quality and will therefore remove them from the UK market? Will that cause conflict with the EU, given that those products have a CE marking? It will be one way of trying to reduce some of that post-Brexit friction. We might be doing it for the best reasons, but they may feel it is undermining the CE mark.

Lastly, can the Minister commit to ensuring that Northern Irish regulations remain closely aligned to Great Britain’s, so as to avoid confusion and delay? We know that the Windsor Framework produced a solution for Northern Ireland after the Brexit negotiations, but there are concerns for people in Northern Ireland about alignment with GB, understanding that there is also an alignment with the EU. Can the Minister make some commitment or give an assurance that Northern Ireland will remain as closely aligned to GB as it possibly can?

With that, these regulations are not particularly controversial. We welcome the fact that there is post-market surveillance. We wish we could have done it as strongly before, given that there have been concerns about certain medical devices. It is really important that we learn the lessons from those scandals, particularly the pelvic mesh and other scandals that have caused so much misery and suffering. We must make sure that we do not see that sort of suffering again.

Lord Cryer Portrait Lord Cryer (Lab)
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I am very grateful to the noble Lord for his comments. The Committee will not know, but he mentioned to me beforehand that he might raise products from other jurisdictions and that I might have to write to him. I should just like to say that his prediction was right: I will have to write, but I shall say a couple of things briefly.

As far as product safety from other jurisdictions is concerned—I will come to the European Union and other jurisdictions later in my closing remarks—there is a scheme for implant cards. I mentioned at the beginning that this SI will, in all probability, be the first of a number which will, at some point, cover putting implant cards into products so that their exact provenance can then be traced. If something comes from another jurisdiction that does not use that method, obviously I hope that that is in itself a way of ensuring some level of safety.

We have both mentioned pelvic mesh, for instance, which has been absolutely deadly. I will say something about that in a minute, but a few years ago there was another scandal involving really nasty breast implants which leaked. When this is fully rolled out, if a woman has a breast implant, we will have the implant card attached to the product and its provenance can be immediately seen: you can see exactly where it came from. That will hopefully ensure an increased level of safety.

As far as the victims—I think that “victims” is the right description—of pelvic mesh are concerned, I know that this has been going on for a while, but the Government are now looking at various options and, at some point in the near future, there will be an announcement on what exactly will be done.

This instrument marks an important change in how we manage medical devices in Great Britain. It will enable not only the MHRA but the whole of the health system to better protect patients. That is what this entire SI is about. The Government acknowledge that patient safety remains paramount, and these regulations must be carefully balanced to support innovation and ensure patients have access to the most effective medical devices.

Where appropriate, the new draft PMS regulations align with international requirements—which the noble Lord mentioned—helping to support the availability and favourability of the Great Britain market and reduce the additional burden on manufacturers supplying medical devices across multiple jurisdictions. The new PMS requirements will also provide a level of regulatory certainty for manufacturers, hopefully making the UK a more attractive location to launch their products.

As I mentioned in my opening comments, this draft statutory instrument represents the first legislative step towards broader medical devices regulatory reform. It will create a strong foundation for further regulatory amendments that enhance the safety of medical devices, ensuring their availability and supporting innovation. It will do this by introducing measures for medical devices after they are placed on the market.

The MHRA is also developing measures for medical devices before they are placed on the market, with the intention to lay additional draft legislation before Parliament in 2025. As I mentioned at the beginning, this will include measures for unique device identifiers—implant cards—and new rules to ensure that claims are consistent with the intended purpose of a device, although there is already existing legislation that covers that to a degree. It will also deliver changes to the classification of some medical devices.

As part of this subsequent legislation, we intend to introduce a framework for international reliance that takes into account, where it is safe to do so, decisions made by comparable regulators in Australia, Canada, the EU and the USA when determining whether a product can be sold in the UK.

Delivering these regulations first, ahead of wider regulatory reform, enables this framework by providing the MHRA with stronger assurance that devices are safe and perform as intended. It demonstrates the Government’s commitment to patient safety and responds directly to the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review, which I and the noble Lord mentioned earlier, led by my noble friend Lady Cumberlege. The review highlighted the terrible consequences for patients when medical devices do not do what they are supposed to.

The MHRA has taken a pragmatic approach to the development of this instrument and prioritised patient safety while supporting global harmonisation across the UK medical device industry.

These regulations will be subject to a six-month implementation period. The majority of devices registered with the MHRA have EU regulatory approval and already comply, or are moving towards compliance with, EU PMS requirements. Therefore, given the similarity of these requirements with those in the EU, we do not expect manufacturers to have difficulty meeting these new GB requirements within this timeframe; however, the MHRA will continue to monitor the situation, and talk to and support industry to get it to readiness.

The MHRA is prepared for these regulations. The strengthened PMS requirements are expected to increase the volume of data and vigilance reports submitted to the MHRA. However, we anticipate that accompanying improvements to data quality will off-set this burden and support automation within the existing MHRA systems.

Before I move to my conclusion, there was one more point, about Northern Ireland. As the noble Lord mentioned, this SI, unlike the previous one, is covered by the Windsor Framework, so a separate process applies to Northern Ireland.

Having said that, I trust that we have demonstrated the need for these regulations to ensure that patients and the public continue to benefit from safe access to medical devices. As the first legislative step of the wider medical devices regulatory reform, this instrument will create a strong foundation and allow for future changes to enhance the safety of medical devices, ensuring their availability and supporting innovation. In turn, we intend to support our life sciences sector to create an environment that fosters safe innovation—I emphasise that.

Lord Kamall Portrait Lord Kamall (Con)
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I would like to have some more details, in writing, about the conversations that we will have with the EU if our post-market surveillance finds something wrong with a product that has a CE mark to make sure that that will be done co-operatively and will not be seen as causing unnecessary friction. I know that the Minister discussed international co-operation in an earlier answer. There is no need to answer now, but if he could include that in a letter to me that would be welcome.

Lord Cryer Portrait Lord Cryer (Lab)
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A process of consultation has been ongoing for quite a while. It has been done in a very constructive way on all sides, I hope, and certainly on the UK side. I will write to the noble Lord about that, as he asked.