Notified Body is an organization designated by an EU Member State to assess the conformity of medical devices before they are placed on the market.
Complete Guide to Notified Body
A Notified Body is an organization designated by an EU Member State to assess whether manufacturers and their medical devices meet the requirements set out in the EU Medical Device Regulation (MDR) and In Vitro Diagnostic Regulation (IVDR).
Role of Notified Bodies:
- Assess device conformity to EU MDR/IVDR
- Review technical documentation
- Conduct quality management system audits
- Issue CE certificates
- Perform unannounced audits
- Monitor post-market compliance
When you need a Notified Body:
- Class IIa, IIb, III devices - Always required
- Class I sterile - Required for sterile aspects
- Class I with measuring function - Required for measuring aspects
- Class I reusable surgical - Required
- All IVDs except Class A - Required
Conformity assessment procedures:
- Annex IX - Quality management system assessment
- Annex X - Type examination
- Annex XI - Production quality assurance
Choosing a Notified Body:
1. Check designation scope covers your device type
2. Verify experience with similar devices
3. Assess capacity and timeline
4. Review audit frequency and approach
5. Consider geographic coverage
Current challenges:
- Limited Notified Body capacity under EU MDR
- Longer wait times for certification
- Stricter requirements than under MDD
- Some NBs withdrew from medical device sector
Major Notified Bodies:
- BSI (UK - pre-Brexit)
- TรV SรD (Germany)
- TรV Rheinland (Germany)
- SGS (Belgium)
- DEKRA (Netherlands)
The number of designated Notified Bodies decreased significantly with EU MDR implementation.
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