The Food and Drug Administration last week alerted health care providers and laboratory personnel to a cybersecurity vulnerability affecting the Universal Copy Service software in certain Illumina medical devices used to sequence DNA for clinical diagnostic use or research. According to the FDA, an unauthorized user could exploit the vulnerability to take control of the device remotely; alter settings, software or data on the device or customer’s network; or affect or breach genomic data results. Customers should review the company’s April 5 notice, immediately install the software patch and contact the company at techsupport@illumina.com if they suspect their device has been compromised. For more on the vulnerability, see the Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency's April 27 advisory.

Related News Articles

Headline
In part one of a new blog, John Riggi, AHA national advisor for cybersecurity and risk, and Scott Gee, AHA deputy national advisor for cybersecurity and risk,…
Perspective
Public
This week, the FBI issued an urgent warning to all users — including hospitals — of a critical security soft spot within Oracle’s E-Business Suite, stating “…
Headline
The Health Sector Coordinating Council Oct. 7 released its Sector Mapping and Risk Toolkit, created to help health care providers and other organizations…
AHA Cyber Intel
As of Oct. 3, 2025, 364 hacking incidents had been reported to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights, affecting over 33…
Headline
The AHA Oct. 6 released a Cybersecurity Advisory urging immediate action against a critical Oracle E-Business Suite vulnerability that is remotely exploitable…
Headline
The AHA has launched an enhanced Cybersecurity and Risk webpage designed to help health care organizations strengthen their defenses against emerging cyber and…