Company: CSTL
Filing Date: 2025-02-27
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001447362-25-000031
Chunk: 66

Company: CASTLE BIOSCIENCES INC
Filing Date: 2025-02-27
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1
Chunk 66
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, the FDA regulates the research, testing, manufacturing, safety, labeling, storage, recordkeeping, pre-market review and marketing authorization, product, marketing and promotion, and sales and distribution of medical devices in the United States to ensure that medical devices distributed domestically are reasonably safe and effective for their intended uses.

Although the FDA believes it has statutory authority to assure that laboratory developed tests are reasonably safe and effective for their intended uses, the FDA has generally exercised its enforcement discretion and not enforced applicable regulations with respect to in vitro diagnostics (“IVDs”) that are intended for clinical use and are designed, manufactured, and used within a single laboratory that is certified under CLIA and meets the regulatory requirements under CLIA to perform high-complexity testing. These tests are referred to as LDTs.

On May 6, 2024, the FDA published a final rule on the regulation of LDTs which amends the FDA's regulations to make it explicit that LDTs are IVDs and regulated as devices under the FD&C Act. Under this final rule, the FDA issued a policy to phaseout, over the course of four years, its general enforcement discretion approach to LDTs and also issued targeted enforcement discretion policies for certain categories of LDTs, including LDTs marketed as of the date of publication of the final rule on May 6, 2024, as well as LDTs that have received approval from the New York State Department of Health. Specifically, the FDA intends to exercise enforcement discretion and not enforce certain medical device requirements (including the requirements for premarket review and marketing authorization and compliance with certain elements of the Quality System Regulation (“QSR”) with respect to LDTs that were marketed as of the date of the final rule’s publication, although such products must still comply with certain other FDA requirements, including registration and listing, portions of the QSR, medical device reporting, labeling, and corrections and removals reporting. However, where these tests are modified in certain ways from the version of the test marketed as of the final rule’s publication date, this enforcement discretion policy will no longer apply, and the FDA intends to enforce all applicable FDA requirements (including premarket review and marketing authorization requirements) consistent with the phaseout policy. In addition, for LDTs that receive approval from NYSDOH, FDA intends to not enforce premarket review and marketing authorization requirements when these requirements are phased in more generally at either three and a half years (for high-risk LDTs) or four years (for low