Use static analysis to manage medical device cybersecurity

March 02, 2016

Use static analysis to manage medical device cybersecurity

The FDA, recognizing the need for more robust security in medical devices, issued its guidance on managing cybersecurity in 2014. The growth of wirele...

The FDA, recognizing the need for more robust security in medical devices, issued its guidance on managing cybersecurity in 2014. The growth of wireless, networked, and Internet-connected devices means that medical devices are more at risk than ever before. In addition, medical devices deal with patient safety and privacy unlike other classes of devices. Risk management (including security hardening and vulnerability management) is the cornerstone of medical device software development, and static analysis plays a key role in the process.

Home health care and medical wearable devices are increasing exponentially and are just one area of growth for medical devices. As with other medical and IoT opportunities, there are safety, security, and privacy concerns associated with this growth. Figure 1 shows the level of growth forecast.

[Figure 1 | Wearables are primed for huge growth in the next few years. These are just one segment of medical devices concerned with security.]

The FDA-published guidance is quite broad, giving high-level direction for managing security. It includes a strong argument for automated tools based on the following guidelines:

· Manufacturers should address cybersecurity during the design and development of the medical device. As something GrammaTech has been communicating for some time, building in security from the start (rather than adding it on later in development) is the key.

· The design and development approach should appropriately address identification of assets, threats, and vulnerabilities. Static analysis integrates seamlessly with good software development processes and specifically aids in detection and identification of security vulnerabilities in code and binaries.

· Manufacturers should assess the impact of threats and vulnerabilities on device functionality and end users/patients and the likelihood of a threat and of a vulnerability being exploited. Using tainted data analysis, vendors’ tools can trace the data source throughout the software to indicate potential vulnerabilities from outside sources.

· In the premarket submission, manufacturers should provide documentation related to their devices’ cybersecurity. Static analysis tools provide reporting to assist in process documentation, test completion, and software readiness.

Static analysis is an important part of a security-first design and development approach. I recommend four steps to improve an existing development process, prioritizing security and making it a top-level requirement:

1. Design with a “security-first” philosophy. For highly connected medical devices, security must be a prime consideration during all stages development. The smart development team builds security requirements, development, and testing into the risk management plan, schedule, and budget. To address the potential unknowns and risks with device security, automated software tools are a significant boon to security assurance.

2. Conduct a system-wide threat assessment and analysis. Your medical device is part of a larger clinical environment. Understanding the potential security issues at a system level is critical. Assessing the known and theoretical attack vectors to your device is essential to identify the security risks that feed into your risk management plan.

3. Leverage automated tools as much as possible. Security adds burdens to development teams and is often outside the realm of developers’ expertise. Automated static analysis, for example, can find defects and security threats in code that traditional manual and automated techniques miss. Static analysis is now an essential component in the security assurance tool set.

4. Use binary analysis to ensure the quality and security of third-party code. Reliance on third-party software and software of unknown quality and security is risky. Binary static analysis (and a combination of source and binary analysis) provides an automated technique for analyzing third-party software, ensuring it meets the whole system’s quality and security standards.

Static analysis tools are highly recommended by software safety standards, and for good reason. The majority of software development costs come from fixing problems in code, so finding defects early in the development cycle can save costs dramatically. Static analysis helps reduce risk, cost, time, and money in the following ways:

· It finds defects before unit testing. Static analysis tools can be used at the developer’s desktop environment and can prevent defects before they enter the build system and the unit test phase of development.

· It finds defects that testing misses. Unit testing, even on projects demanding high code coverage levels, can still miss important defects.

· It prevents defects in the first place. Enforcing strict coding standards, such as MISRA C, can help prevent many classes of defects in code from the beginning. Enforcing good discipline in coding and creating a develop-analyze-test micro cycle for small code changes can prevent many defects from being created in the first place.

· It analyzes software of unknown pedigree (SOUP). Use of third-party code such as commercial off-the-shelf software (COTS) and open-source software is common in medical device software development. SOUP must be managed carefully for safety and security before inclusion in a device. Static analysis tools can analyze third-party source and binaries to discover defects and security vulnerabilities in software that could be impossible to test otherwise.

· It accelerates premarket submission. Static analysis (and many other testing and life-cycle management tools) provides automated documentation to support testing, coding standard, and quality/robustness evidence. Much of the manpower used in satisfying safety certifications is documentation and evidence production. Automation (specifically static analysis) reduces this burden significantly.

Static analysis and application life-cycle management tools fit well with the FDA’s published guidance on managing cybersecurity in medical devices. Following a “security-first” mindset and process, manufacturers can build in security rather than make it an add-on. Static analysis tools provide tangible benefits within development to reduce risk, cost, and time.

Bill Graham is the technical marketing engineer at GrammaTech. He has more than 25 years of experience in the software industry, including embedded and real-time systems development, static analysis, UML modeling, and object- oriented design. Bill holds Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Computer Systems Engineering from Carleton University.

GrammaTech
www.grammatech.com
[email protected]
@GrammaTech
Linkedin: linkedin.com/company/grammatech
YouTube: youtube.com/user/GrammaTechVideos

Bill Graham, Technical Marketing Engineer, GrammaTech
Categories
Healthcare
Security