Cleared Traditional

K022740 - DATEX-OHMEDA S/5 COMPACT CRITICAL CARE MONITOR WITH L-CICU02 & L-CICU02A SOFTWARE (FDA 510(k) Clearance)

Class II Cardiovascular device cleared through predicate-based substantial equivalence - typically does not require clinical trials.

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Nov 2002
Decision
87d
Days
Class 2
Risk

K022740 is an FDA 510(k) clearance for the DATEX-OHMEDA S/5 COMPACT CRITICAL CARE MONITOR WITH L-CICU02 & L-CICU02A SOFT.... Classified as Monitor, St Segment With Alarm (product code MLD), Class II - Special Controls.

Submitted by Datex-Ohmeda (Needham, US). The FDA issued a Cleared decision on November 14, 2002 after a review of 87 days - a notably fast clearance cycle.

This device falls under the Cardiovascular FDA review panel, regulated under 21 CFR 870.1025 - the FDA cardiovascular device oversight framework. The Traditional 510(k) pathway establishes clearance through substantial equivalence to a legally marketed predicate device, without requiring clinical trial data.

Device pattern: Fast-track predicate clearance. Standard predicate reliance. The short review cycle indicates strong predicate alignment - the FDA found sufficient equivalence without extended technical review.

View all Datex-Ohmeda devices

Submission Details

510(k) Number K022740 FDA.gov
FDA Decision Cleared Substantially Equivalent - Traditional 510(k) (SESE)
Date Received August 19, 2002
Decision Date November 14, 2002
Days to Decision 87 days
Submission Type Traditional
Review Panel Cardiovascular (CV)
Summary Summary PDF
Third-party Review No - reviewed directly by FDA
Regulatory Context
Review time vs. panel average
38d faster than avg
Panel avg: 125d · This submission: 87d
Pathway characteristics
Predicate-based equivalence. No clinical trials required.

Device Classification

Product Code MLD Monitor, St Segment With Alarm
Device Class Class 2 - Special Controls
CFR Regulation 21 CFR 870.1025
What this classification means

Class II devices require demonstration of substantial equivalence to a legally marketed predicate device. This pathway does not require clinical trials - it relies on engineering equivalence and performance data. Most Cardiovascular devices follow this clearance model.