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9 hot tips for choosing a medical device contract ...

Jan. 13, 2025

9 hot tips for choosing a medical device contract ...

All kinds of medical device OEMs need contract manufacturing support. From start-ups and disruptors with no device manufacturing expertise to established developers looking to change their existing suppliers. But how do you choose the right fit supplier for your project? 

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9 hot tips for choosing a medical device contract manufacturer

1. Ensure their capabilities match your needs

What classification of product do you need to manufacture? High volume/low complexity class 1 products or the most sophisticated Class 3 in-vitro diagnostic equipment (IVD devices)? Whatever your needs, ensure your chosen partner has the skill set and capacity to deliver. Do you need electronics or mechanical assembly expertise? Do you need design support? Has your chosen CM (Contract Manufacturer) got the experience and client list that demonstrates their track record of success in your product area? Will they be able to fulfil according to your timelines and leverage the global supply chain in the most efficient way possible?

2. Make sure they have gained ISO : and FDA approvals

Your supplier should have gained the QMS standard ISO : and have a track record of meeting regulatory requirements in the regions where you plan to launch. For those wanting to launch in the US, your partner should be compliant with the FDA's Quality System Regulation (QSR) as outlined in 21 CFR Part 820. You should ensure they are an FDA registered manufacturing facility with listed products and a history of successful FDA inspections.

Ask to review their Quality Management Systems and check on the FDA site to see if they have any findings or warning letters against them before you commit.

&#;A supplier might be offering you preferential rates, but you run the risk of being their operational guinea pig if they haven&#;t delivered against specific standards and regional regulations before.&#; Teng Mei Fong - Quality Manager for ESCATEC Medical

3. Look for advanced DfX and VAVE capabilities

Access to design expertise can be a game changer for more complex products. VE (Value Engineering) and DfX (Design for Excellence) capabilities can help you design for manufacturing in ways that will significantly improve performance and extend your product&#;s lifecycle.

The right contract manufacturing company should add value for you beyond cost and scale. Your partner could help you leverage new IP in the sector, from recommending cutting-edge materials to supporting user-centric design insight.

For example, the team at medical device OEM Vibrosonic needed to find a delivery partner who could help them implement DfM (Design for Manufacturing) plans - to commercialise production of their tiny yet complex hearing device.

ESCATEC&#;s skill in electronics miniaturisation helped them realise their earpiece designs with cutting-edge materiality and MOEM design capabilities.

&#;Producing and working with a substrate as thin as this requires specialist skills and equipment, which only a few manufacturers around the world can master.&#; Dr Dominik Kaltenbacher, Founder and Managing Director of Vibrosonic

You can read more about ESCATEC&#;s work with Vibrosonic here.

&#;An end-to-end process centred on precision and quality removes the gaps between design and manufacture that can typically cause friction. This means that products can be safely and efficiently optimised for mass production from the outset, keeping costs low and removing unnecessary production delays. Working this way ensures partners keep full control of their design with full IP.&#; Harald Schroeder, Director of Business Development, ESCATEC

4. Ensure access for due diligence and beyond

Make sure you&#;ll have all the access to your supplier you need as part of your due diligence process. Arrange site visits and/or virtual tours of facilities to assess the size and readiness of their operations both locally and overseas.  Going forward, you should expect complete visibility and hands-on support throughout your NPI process.  You should expect face-to-face quarterly and annual business reviews once the product is in the market, as well as regular global supply chain and business updates from a dedicated accounts team throughout the product lifecycle.

"When we visited Malaysia, we saw that ESCATEC had a first-class production facility. We saw how professional and efficiently managed all their processes and operations were. The visit was an incredible hosting experience and deepened our relationships with the manufacturing team on site - as well as ESCATEC&#;s local and global management. We experienced Penang as a thriving ecosystem for medical electronics manufacturing operations.&#; Lisa Krapinger-Rüther, Former Co-CEO of breathe ilo

5. Check out their lifecycle support

Developing medical devices can take a long time and be very expensive.  You need a CM to help you bring your product to market rapidly, but also keep it there for as long as possible. The right post-production support can fight early obsolescence and continue adding value to consumers even as rival products in the marketplace start to fail. Look for a partner who can help you:

  • Manage obsolescence with design support - ensuring you specify materials and components that are not going to be quickly discontinued or outmoded
  • Compliance support post-launch (i.e. RoHS, WEEE, REACH)
  • Repair and return support
  • Enhanced support for spares and field maintenance kits
  • Feature update/upgrade support

&#;We spoke to a lot of partners, advisors and similar companies. But it became clear that only ESCATEC had the facilities and staff to match all our future needs. ESCATEC could help us in sourcing large quantities of components, which we needed to grow and scale in the near future. But they also had the skills to help us continually modify and improve the product to meet the latest, global med tech standards.&#; Lisa Krapinger-Rüther, Former Co-CEO of breathe ilo


6. Think about geography

Where your partner is located can make a significant difference to your costs but could potentially undermine your sense of control over a project.

For a complex medical device design and manufacturing OEM based in Europe, working with a large company located thousands of miles away can save you money on labour but may rob you of critical moments of creative input.

Will you be happy feeding back on a prototype if you can&#;t physically hold it in your hands?

A partner with facilities available locally, as well as internationally can coverage, capabilities and customer service.

The German Fertility tech innovator breathe ilo chose a global medical device manufacturer with facilities local to them for exactly these reasons:

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With competitive price and timely delivery, APC Med sincerely hope to be your supplier and partner.

&#;Escatec&#;s Swiss NPI team were expert, professional and supportive. Communication was transparent, and there was effective expectation management around timeline and cost." Lisa Krapinger-Rüther, Former Co-CEO of breathe ilo

At the same time, the added dimension of a global manufacturing gave them access to supply chains and specialised labour in Malaysia that offered the ultimate flexibility in production and procurement.

&#;The local NPI support and close integration with the production team in Malaysia meant we were confident of a successful transition process. There was a smooth transfer from low-volume to high-volume international manufacturing." Lisa Krapinger-Rüther, Former Co-CEO of breathe ilo

7. Consolidate services where possible

Constantly switching between suppliers is a hassle as well as an IP and quality risk.  You need to be thinking long-term and holistically as you tender for CM services.

Spending time and effort thinking about existing and future requirements when you are choosing a medical device manufacturing partner, could save you a lot of time and trouble later on.

Consolidating service provision from product design, to manufacture, quality assurance, logistics and servicing can be a long term cost-saving strategy.

&#;We chose ESCATEC because they could provide us with a complete solution from designing how the product would work right through to the final production process, all conforming to the ISO standard for medical equipment &#; ISO. This is an extremely complex device that people&#;s lives depend on, so it is vital that it is designed and built to the highest standards.&#; Peter Rossegger, Former CEO of Carl Reiner GMBH

Read more about Carl Reiner&#;s groundbreaking work with ESCATEC.

8. Choose a partner - not a supplier

When you&#;re choosing a CM partner, make sure you&#;re culturally and professionally aligned. The teams from each side should have a shared understanding of the quality and commercial objectives that you need to drive your project.  Handing over responsibility for design and medical device assembly can be a nerve-racking business. Communication is key.  Your partner should be proactively involved in keeping you in the loop as the NPI process is designed and implemented.  They should keep adding value throughout the product lifecycle.  You should feel your CM partner is an extension of your operation.

&#;Setting up mass production lines is complex, but ESCATEC ensured any problems in our manufacturing process were proactively discovered and jointly overcome. This was enabled by transparent communication and the solution-oriented mindset of ESCATEC employees around the world, working together with us.&#; Lisa Krapinger-Rüther, Former Co-CEO of breathe ilo

9. Consider the future

Accessing med tech development and manufacturing services can be expensive and fraught with risk. But the most successful partnerships in this space are not short-term and transactional, but long-term and collaborative.

You need to build products as rapidly as possible to see ROI for your investors, but you also need access to innovative design and manufacturing thinking to ensure those products remain relevant and profitable for as long as possible.

&#;Medical devices often have long product development cycles&#; at ESCATEC, we don&#;t mind working to these timescales because we are not driven by quarterly revenue results. We're looking for long-term medical device partnerships that deliver long-term benefits for our clients and their customers.&#;
Charles-Alexandre Albin, CEO ESCATEC

Choose your partner carefully and you&#;ll be able to develop and manufacture not just one successful product but a succession of products in the most cost-effective way. You&#;ll have a blueprint for repeatable NPI success with the mechanisms and support in place to optimise the way you work each time.

&#;With ESCATEC as our partner, we can confidently scale up production to meet evolving international demand. We have exciting plans to enhance our fertility tracker's functionality, potentially transforming it into a contraceptive device in the future. ESCATEC's expertise and support will be instrumental in realising our vision.&#; Lisa Krapinger-Rüther, Former Co-CEO of breathe ilo

5 Ways to Choose a Medical Contract Manufacturer

Deciding on the ideal medical contract manufacturer (CM) can be a difficult process, as there are many aspects to consider. Medical device CMs play a critical role in the medical device manufacturing process for original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) whether it&#;s a need for casting and molding, R&D design, or custom packaging. As a medical instrument company looking for the right medical CM to outsource to, you need to know what will determine a successful partnership.

High-Quality Manufacturing with ISO Certification

A high-quality system alongside the essential credentials, such as ISO and MedAccred, as well as having a risk mitigation plan in place is invaluable to OEMs. Having these essential certifications hold CMs to certain requirements that keep them consistently meeting regulatory standards as well as satisfying their customers&#; needs. It also means that CMs with these credentials have invested the time, effort, and money to ensure that their quality systems are equivalent or exceed others in their field. Quality is often one of the most important factors in any decision regarding medical devices, so choosing a CM with all the essential accreditations, FDA compliance, and quality focus will save you both time and money in the long run.

A Medical Contract Manufacturer That is a Partner

Great customer service makes all the difference no matter what industry you are in but when medical devices are concerned, responsiveness and open communication are critical. The ability to speak to a real human, not an operator (and the right person to answer your question at that!) will make a CM stand out among their competition. After making initial contact with the business development team, ask to take a tour of the facility and at that time discuss some specific questions with the engineering team. At this juncture, their expertise, as well as their method of communication to your inquiries, will indicate how business will operate throughout the partnership.

Geo-Location and Company Size

Location, location, location. It may seem cliche but the geo-location of the CM will significantly affect the overall cost and quality of the final product as well as the company&#;s responsiveness. In today&#;s business environment large companies typically are unwilling to make changes in their process or to client projects in order to accommodate the customer&#;s requirement. While there may be specific situations in which outsourcing overseas may be the best fit your OEM company, choosing a domestic company that will move quickly with new projects, meet volume requirements and provides on-time delivery will offer the flexibility and reliability needed for a great long-term partnership.

Cleanroom Capabilities

Why should an OEM select a medical device contract manufacturer that has cleanroom capabilities? Simple. CMs with cleanroom capabilities have a lower risk of contamination when devices are fabricated in cleanrooms because all product is treated as if it were a sterile product. Devices made in cleanrooms tend to be better quality and manufacturers often have a higher skill level and diligently take care of the devices throughout the manufacturing process.

Good Contract Manufacturers Will Work With You

It is critical that a CM has a clear understanding of what the OEM&#;s overall goals are and that they are willing to work with them to better understand and achieve those goals. A CM that can do that, will ultimately be the best fit. Price will always be an important factor in choosing the right CM for your project but other criteria play an equally significant role in forming a long-term and profitable partnership. If you are interested in requesting a sample of BMP Medical&#;s work or you want to start a conversation with one of the experts, we would love to hear about your project.

If you want to learn more, please visit our website Medical Device Equipment Manufacturers(ja,th,tr).

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