< Zurück zu den aktuellen Neuigkeiten & Events

Healthcare Scanner

How do you intend your software/app to be used?

Juni 2021

Is your software/app a medical device?

For over 10 years now, software used for medical purposes might be classified as a medical device under EU law. The rules were initially laid out in 2007[1] which amended the earlier Directives dealing with medical devices[2] and in vitro diagnostic medical devices[3] with guidelines adopted in 2012 and revised in 2016[4]. With the advent of the new Medical Devices Regulation[5] (MDR) and In Vitro Diagnostic Medical Devices Regulation (IVDR)[6], replacing the previous Directives, it has been interesting to understand the current regulatory position.

Guidance has been issued by the EU on medical devices, including in late 2019 on the qualification and classification of medical device software (MDSW) under MDR and IVDR[7]. We also now have the new flowchart issued in Mar 2021 by the EU[8] setting out decision steps to assist qualification of MDSWs. Updated guidance on borderline cases is however still awaited.

Of course, as the MDR and IVDR were not EU law automatically retained by the EU Withdrawal Agreement, the provisions contained within the MDR and IVDR will not be transposed into law or be implemented in Great Britain. The UK government says that it is committed to improving the standards and scrutiny of medical devices that reach UK patients using its wide-ranging powers under the Medicines and Medical Devices Act 2021[9] so it will be interesting to see if they tighten up the medical devices rules as well. British manufacturers looking to sell in the EU will however still have to comply with any higher standards set by the MDR and IVDR.

Qualification

Software is very simply defined as a set of instructions that processes input data and creates output data. If the software forms part of a device, then you simply look to whether the device overall qualifies as a medical device in the usual way.

Both the MDR and IVDR make it clear that software in its own right qualifies as a medical device, when specifically intended by the manufacturer to be used for one or more of the following specific medical purposes:

  • diagnosis, prevention, monitoring, prediction, prognosis, treatment or alleviation of disease
  • diagnosis, monitoring, treatment, alleviation of, or compensation for, an injury or disability
  • investigation, replacement or modification of the anatomy or of a physiological or pathological process or state
  • providing information by means of in vitro examination of specimens derived from the human body, including organ, blood and tissue donations and which does not achieve its principal intended action by pharmacological, immunological or metabolic means, in or on the human body, but which may be assisted in its function by such means.

Software must have a medical purpose on its own to be qualified as MDSW. It is the intended purpose as described by the manufacturer of the software which is relevant. So the data:

  • supplied by the manufacturer on the label, in the instructions for use or in promotional or sales materials or statements; or
  • specified by the manufacturer in the clinical evaluation or in the performance evaluation set out that intended purpose.

Software for general purposes, even when used in a healthcare setting, or software intended for life style and well being purposes is not a medical device. As well as software, the classification criteria also apply to apps, whether on a mobile phone, in the cloud or on other platforms.

Software can directly control a medical device, provide immediate decision-triggering information, or provide support for healthcare professionals. The guidance gives radiotherapy treatment software, blood glucose meter software and ECG interpretation software as examples of each of these types. Software which alters the representation of data for a medical purpose would also qualify as MDSW.

Classification

In simple terms, most software will be classified under MDR as class I. Notable exceptions are:

  • Software providing information which is used to take decisions with diagnosis or therapeutic purposes (Diagnosis/Therapeutic Software) and Software intended to monitor physiological processes (Physiological Software) are in most cases class IIa
  • Diagnosis/Therapeutic Software where the resulting decisions may cause a serious deterioration of a person’s state of health or a surgical intervention is in class IIb
  • Physiological Software intended for monitoring of vital physiological parameters, where the nature of variations of them could result in immediate danger to the patient is class IIb
  • Diagnosis/Therapeutic Software where the resulting decisions may cause death or an irreversible deterioration of a person’s state of health is unsurprisingly in class III
  • Under IVDR, if the software is independent of any other device, it is classified in its own right. However, if the software is exclusively intended to drive or influence the use of an instrument intended to be used for in vitro diagnostic procedures, it is classified in the same class as the instrument.

Conclusion

The classification of a medical device is always a tricky process and particularly so for software. So you should always seek specialist regulatory advice as early as possible. The guidance does help the layman though by providing examples which can help you understand where your device is likely to sit.

[1] Medical Devices Directive 2007/47/EC
[2] Medical Devices Directive 93/42/EEC
[3] In Vitro Medical Diagnostic Medical Devices Directive 98/79/EC
[4] MEDDEV 2.1/6
[5] Regulation (EU) 2017/745, implementation date 26 May 2021
[6] Regulation (EU) 2017/746, implementation date 26 May 2022
[7] https://www.medical-device-regulation.eu/mdr-guidance-documents/
[8] https://ec.europa.eu/health/sites/health/files/md_sector/docs/md_mdcg_2021_mdsw_en.pdf
[9] https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2021/3/enacted
[10] Annex VIII of MDR and Annex VIII of IVDR

 

This update was prepared by HGF Partner Janet Knowles.

Aktuelle Neuigkeiten

Die Beschwerdekammer des EPA äußert sich zum Umfang des Ausschlusses der Sittenwidrigkeit von der Patentierbarkeit

Die jüngste Entscheidung T1553/22 der Beschwerdekammer verpflichtete die Kammer, den Umfang der Ausschlüsse von der Patentierbarkeit gemäß Artikel 53(a) EPÜ zu prüfen. Die Erfindung in diesem Fall bezog sich auf …

Weiterlesen

PRESSEMITTEILUNG: HGF gibt die Beförderung von neun neuen Partnern nach der Investition von CBPE bekannt

HGF ist stolz darauf, die Beförderung von neun neuen Partnern in der gesamten Kanzlei bekannt zu geben, was einen wichtigen Meilenstein nach der privaten Investition von CBPE im Oktober 2024 …

Weiterlesen

HGF wird bei den Legal Insider Awards als Kanzlei des Jahres für geistiges Eigentum (Leeds) ausgezeichnet

Wir sind stolz zu verkünden, dass HGF vom Legal Insider als Kanzlei des Jahres für geistiges Eigentum – Leeds 2025 – ausgezeichnet wurde! Diese Auszeichnung ist ein Beweis für das …

Weiterlesen
Event - 3. Juni 2025

Salzburg Seminar: Patente, Marken, Schutzrechte – wie Startups strategisch richtig handeln

Gerade in der Gründungsphase treffen junge Unternehmen viele richtungsweisende Entscheidungen. Eine der wichtigsten Fragen: Wie gehe ich strategisch mit Innovationen, Ideen und Markenaufbau um? Wer den Schutz des geistigen Eigentums …

Veranstaltungsdetails

IP Zutaten: Warum gehen die Patentanmeldungen im Bereich Lebensmitteltechnologie in Europa zurück?

Anzahl der europäischen Patentanmeldungen und Erteilungen im Bereich Lebensmittelchemie Im März 2025 veröffentlichte das Europäische Patentamt (EPA) seinen Patentindex 2024 – eine Analyse der Anzahl der Patentanmeldungen in den einzelnen …

Weiterlesen

Neudefinition des Designschutzes in der Europäischen Union - Was das für Ihr Unternehmen bedeutet

Am 1. Mai 2025 tritt die erste Phase der lang erwarteten Reformen des Geschmacksmusterrechts der Europäischen Union in Kraft, die zweite Phase der Änderungen wird am 1. Juli 2026 eingeführt. …

Weiterlesen

HGF geht Partnerschaft mit Rowan Patents ein, um Innovationen bei der Ausarbeitung von Patentanmeldungen voranzutreiben

HGF hat sich mit Rowan Patents, jetzt Teil von Clarivate, zusammengeschlossen, um unseren Prozess der Ausarbeitung von Patentanmeldungen zu verbessern und zu optimieren und so weiterhin einen erstklassigen Mandantenservice zu …

Weiterlesen