10 Common Reasons Medical Devices Fail FDA Review (and How to Avoid Them)

Apr 2, 2026 | 2 min read

FDA Review

The FDA review process can be one of the most intimidating parts of听developing and manufacturing a new medical device.听You鈥檝e听invested time, money, and momentum into your product. You may even have strong early data or a working prototype. But then you hear stories of devices getting stuck, delayed, or outright rejected during FDA review, and suddenly the risk feels very real.听

At 麻豆传媒AV在线看, we often work with teams navigating product development and regulatory expectations. What we’ve noticed is that most FDA failures aren鈥檛 because the product is a bad idea; they happen because of avoidable gaps in planning, documentation, or alignment with FDA expectations. 

Top 10 Reasons Medical Devices Fail FDA Review

These are 10 of the most common reasons听medical devices听fail FDA review, along with practical insight on how to avoid them.听

1. Inadequate Clinical Evidence

One of the most common reasons devices fail FDA review is straightforward: there isn鈥檛 enough evidence to prove safety and effectiveness. For startups, this often happens when teams try to minimize time and cost by collecting 鈥渏ust enough鈥 data. The problem is that what feels sufficient internally may not meet FDA expectations. 

This can show up in a few ways: 

  • Clinical studies that are too small or poorly designed听听
  • Endpoints that听don鈥檛听clearly support the intended use听听
  • Data that听doesn鈥檛听match the claims being made听听

How to avoid it:
Start with a clear clinical strategy early. Align your study design with FDA guidance or get feedback through a听pre-submission听before running trials.听

2. Poorly Defined Intended Use or Indications for Use

If the FDA can鈥檛 clearly understand what your device is supposed to do, that鈥檚 a problem. This is especially common for startups trying to maximize market opportunities early. 

Common issues include: 

  • Claims that are too broad or vague听听
  • Mismatch between labeling and actual data听听
  • Trying to position the device for multiple uses without proper support听听

How to avoid it:
Be specific and focused. Define your intended use tightly and make sure every piece of data supports that claim.听

3. Weak Design Controls and Documentation

Your Design History File (DHF) tells the story of how your product was developed. If that story has gaps, the FDA will notice. Even strong medical products can fail FDA review if the documentation doesn鈥檛 prove how they were built and tested. 

Common red flags are: 

  • Missing design inputs or outputs听听
  • Poor traceability between requirements, risks, and testing听听
  • Incomplete verification or validation records听听

How to avoid it:
Treat documentation as part of development, not an afterthought. Build traceability from day one听using date stamps and revision history.听

4. Incomplete Risk Management (ISO 14971 Issues)

The FDA expects you to identify, assess, and mitigate risks in a structured way. For connected or complex devices, this is even more important (more explanation in the next section). 

Failures often include:听

  • Missing hazard analyses听听
  • Incomplete risk controls听听
  • No clear risk-benefit justification听听

How to avoid it:
Follow听听closely and ensure every identified risk is tied to a mitigation and validation activity.听

5. Software Validation and Cybersecurity Gaps

If your device includes听software听(and most do nowadays), this is a big one.听The FDA has increased its scrutiny here, especially for connected devices.听

Common problems: 

  • Incomplete software verification and validation听听
  • Lack of documentation around software lifecycle processes听听
  • Missing cybersecurity controls or threat analysis听听

How to avoid it:
Document your software development process thoroughly and include cybersecurity considerations from the start.听

6. Biocompatibility and Material Safety Issues

Your device interacts with the human body, so the FDA needs to know it鈥檚 safe. Teams sometimes underestimate how much testing is required. 

Failures often stem from: 

  • Missing biocompatibility testing听听
  • Using materials without proper justification听听
  • Relying on assumptions instead of evidence听听

*Note: Research the potential future changes of medical device materials, as we may see the removal of materials that aren鈥檛 biodegradable or sustainable soon, and it may have an impact on approval.  

How to avoid it:
Follow听听guidance and plan testing early based on how and where the device is used.听

7. Manufacturing and Quality System Deficiencies

The FDA isn鈥檛 just evaluating your product. They鈥檙e evaluating your ability to consistently produce it. Startups and small businesses often delay building a formal quality management system, which can create problems later. 

Common issues include: 

How to avoid it:
Implement quality systems early, even if听you鈥檙e听not manufacturing at scale yet.听

8. Disorganized or Incomplete FDA Submissions

Even if everything else is solid, a messy submission can slow you down or lead to rejection. Remember, FDA reviewers are human. If your submission is hard to follow, that works against you. 

Common problems: 

  • Missing required sections听听
  • Inconsistent information across documents听听
  • Lack of clarity in how data is presented听听

How to avoid it:
Structure your submission clearly and review it from the perspective of someone seeing it for the first time.听

9. Ignoring FDA Guidance or Feedback

The FDA provides guidance documents for a reason. Don鈥檛 ignore them! 

This includes: 

  • Not following device-specific guidance听听
  • Skipping the Pre-Submission () process听听
  • Misinterpreting or overlooking FDA feedback听听

How to avoid it:
Engage early. Use the听Pre-Sub听process to听validate听your approach before investing heavily in testing.听

10. Lack of a Clear Regulatory Strategy

This is the underlying issue behind many of the failures listed here. 

Without a clear strategy, teams can easily: 

  • Choose the wrong regulatory pathway (510(k), De Novo, PMA)听听
  • Underestimate data requirements听听
  • Build the product without aligning to regulatory expectations听听

This often leads to rework, delays, and added costs. 

How to avoid it: 
Define your regulatory strategy early and revisit it as your product evolves. 

How Often Do Devices Fail FDA Review?

Most devices听aren鈥檛听outright rejected, but many receive deficiency letters asking for more information. This can add months (or longer) to your timeline, increase development costs, and/or delay market entry and revenue.听听

Can You Recover After a Failed FDA Review?

Absolutely. Treat their feedback as direction, not听a setback, and follow the tips in this article. Teams that recover听well:听听

  • Address every FDA comment thoroughly听
  • Communicate clearly with reviewers听
  • Bring in outside expertise when it鈥檚 needed听

Should You Bring in Outside Help?

For many startups and small engineering teams, the answer is yes. 

Regulatory and product development partners can help you avoid common mistakes, build stronger documentation and systems, and move faster with fewer surprises. While it will cost you money to hire an external resource, it often pays to have an outside perspective. 

Need Help Preparing for FDA Review?

If听you鈥檙e听building a medical device and want to reduce risk before submission, it can help to have an experienced team in your corner. At 麻豆传媒AV在线看, we work with engineering teams and startups to:听

  • Strengthen design controls and documentation听听
  • Align product development with regulatory expectations听听
  • Identify听gaps before they become costly delays听听

If听you鈥檙e听unsure whether your device is ready for FDA review, or you want a second set of eyes on your process,听we鈥檙e听here to help.听Start the conversation with our team online.

Written By:

Justin DeKoekkoek Project Engineer

Justin DeKoekkoek

Project Engineer

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