Hello Jason Glithero
Your Discussion has gone 30 days without a reply. If you still need help with COMSOL and have an on-subscription license, please visit our Support Center for help.
If you do not hold an on-subscription license, you may find an answer in another Discussion or in the Knowledge Base.
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
8 years ago
28 nov. 2016, 19:59 UTC−5
Hello,
There is a report related to this topic:
"Reporting of Computational Modeling Studies in Medical Device Submissions: Guidance for Industry and Food and Drug Administration Staff, Document issued on: September 21, 2016, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Food & Drug Administration."
www.fda.gov/downloads/MedicalDevices/DeviceRegulationandGuidance/GuidanceDocuments/UCM381813.pdf
-DW
Hello,
There is a report related to this topic:
"Reporting of Computational Modeling Studies in Medical Device Submissions: Guidance for Industry and Food and Drug Administration Staff, Document issued on: September 21, 2016, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Food & Drug Administration."
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/MedicalDevices/DeviceRegulationandGuidance/GuidanceDocuments/UCM381813.pdf
-DW
Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
5 years ago
3 mars 2020, 14:16 UTC−5
Updated:
5 years ago
11 mars 2020, 15:31 UTC−4
Best practices in V&V, promoted by organizations like the FDA and ASME, point to (at least) two verification steps: 1/ checking that the software you use performs on your machine the same way as it does on the developers' (This is frequently referred to as Software Quality Assurance, or SQA) and 2/ ascertaining that the software returns results that are consistent with established and trusted, exact or approximate, solutions for the same equations (This is referred to as Numerical Code Validation, or NCV). Additionally, they'll recommend that you demonstrate that the equations you chose to solve in the software are appropriate for the real-word situation; That is validation.
COMSOL recently added to our website a page that gathers well over a hundred verification and validation models and their documentation. Those models can be filtered by discipline or by module, as well as searched through via a free word search. The results produced by those models are in various ways checked against analytical solutions, or semi-analytical solutions, or numerical solutions obtained by other methods, or experimental data reported in the literature. because we provide pre-computed solutions for all those models, they can be used to document your NCV and SQA efforts to regulatory authorities.
Best,
Jeff
-------------------
Jeff Hiller
Best practices in V&V, promoted by organizations like the FDA and ASME, point to (at least) two verification steps: 1/ checking that the software you use performs on your machine the same way as it does on the developers' (This is frequently referred to as Software Quality Assurance, or SQA) and 2/ ascertaining that the software returns results that are consistent with established and trusted, exact or approximate, solutions for the same equations (This is referred to as Numerical Code Validation, or NCV). Additionally, they'll recommend that you demonstrate that the equations you chose to solve in the software are appropriate for the real-word situation; That is validation.
COMSOL recently added to our website [a page](https://www.comsol.com/verification-models) that gathers well over a hundred verification and validation models and their documentation. Those models can be filtered by discipline or by module, as well as searched through via a free word search. The results produced by those models are in various ways checked against analytical solutions, or semi-analytical solutions, or numerical solutions obtained by other methods, or experimental data reported in the literature. because we provide pre-computed solutions for all those models, they can be used to document your NCV and SQA efforts to regulatory authorities.
Best,
Jeff