Overview
Attend this lecture to learn about the end-to-end experiences of medical companies large and small that have launched new products, allowing you to understand the requirements of getting a medical device from concept to production.
The UK has a strong medical device innovation record, both from academia and private research.
A regular stream of devices – many of them radically disruptive - emerge from biomedical engineering laboratories but fail to make it in the mainstream market as a result of the complex, highly regulated development market., Devices are dependent on intellectual property protection and complicated by high barriers to market entry for any new company. In addition the need to demonstrate both clinical efficacy and economic benefit requires extensive clinical trials and validation before sales are achievable.
With this in mind, this lecture will provide practical experiences of how to manage the translational research journey for new medical devices, from initial laboratory concept to marketed medical device.
Attend this lecture to learn about the end-to-end experiences of medical companies large and small that have launched new products, allowing you to understand the requirements of getting a medical device from concept to production.