Tag Archives: MACE

Kips Bay Medical Provides FDA Update & Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2012 Results

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Kips Bay Medical Provides FDA Update & Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2012 Results

MINNEAPOLIS–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Kips Bay Medical, Inc. (NAS: KIPS) along with Manny Villafaña, its Founder, Chairman and CEO, today provided an update on its progress with the U.S. FDA and announced financial results for fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2012.

FDA Update

Recent highlights:

  • Receipt of IDE approval with conditions from the U.S. FDA.
  • U.S. FDA approves enrollment expansion to 15 patients in the U.S.
  • First eSVS Mesh Implants in the U.S.
  • U.S. FDA removes conditions from IDE approval.

Kips Bay is currently conducting a feasibility trial in the United States and Europe. This trial is a multi-center, randomized study of external saphenous vein graft (“SVG“) support using the Company’s eSVS® Mesh in CABG Surgery and is titled the eMESH I clinical feasibility trial. The objective of this trial is to demonstrate the initial safety and performance of the Company’s eSVS Mesh for use as an external SVG support device during coronary artery bypass procedures. Kips Bay Medical expects to enroll up to 120 patients at eight European and four U.S. sites. Enrollments in the eMESH I trial commenced in late August 2012 at the Bern University Hospital, Bern, Switzerland. The primary safety endpoint is the rate of major adverse cardiac events (“MACE“) within 30 days of the procedure. The eSVS Mesh performance will be evaluated based upon the angiographic patency rate of the enrolled grafts, where patency is defined as less than 50% stenosis, or blockage, of the SVG at six months after surgery. As of March 1, 2013, six sites in Europe and the United States have received ethics committee approval and are actively recruiting patients. The Company expects to use the data from this study as the basis for the filing of a request for an Investigational Device Exemption (“IDE“) to perform a pivotal trial in the United States and Europe.

On November 8, 2012, Kips Bay announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (“FDA“) had approved with conditions our application for an IDE to include four U.S. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The Big Weight-Drug Wait

By Keith Speights, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

“Wait” seems to be the operative word for the obesity drug industry these days. Investors in VIVUS  are still waiting to see if Qsymia can attain the levels of commercial success that they anticipated. Arena Pharmaceuticals  anxiously awaits finalization of scheduling for Belviq by the slow-moving U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. But the biggest wait of all belongs to Orexigen Therapeutics . Here’s the latest on the waiting game for the third potential weight-loss drug to hit the market — Orexigen’s Contrave.

In a hurry
After the initial New Drug Application, or NDA, for Contrave was not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Orexigen hurried to move forward with the cardiovascular study needed to satisfy the FDA. The company launched this additional research, called the Light Study, in June. By early July, Orexigen announced that enrollment was going much faster than initially expected and could wrap up in first quarter of 2013 — taking around half the time originally anticipated.

That outlook actually proved to be pessimistic. Orexigen completed screening for the Light Study by mid-December, enrolling around 9,000 patients to participate in the study and cutting off more than a year from the initial timetable. The next major milestone for the research will be an interim analysis. That analysis can’t occur until 87 or so major adverse cardiovascular events, or MACE, occur with the patients. After the herculean efforts to get the study going so rapidly, Orexigen must now essentially wait for bad things to happen.

In January, the company announced that the resubmission process for the Contrave NDA could be hurried along somewhat. The FDA will allow a summary report from the Light Study interim analysis to be used with the NDA in lieu of a complete report. While the complete clinical study report will be required within 60 days of the resubmission, this decision cuts time out of the process.

How long will the waiting game take? Orexigen says that plans are to submit the NDA again by the end of this year. However, company executives have hedged in recent comments, stating that this time frame could be pushed back to early 2014 if the MACE rate is on the low end of the target 1% to 2% range.

Late to the game?
A key question for investors looking at Orexigen relates to how successful Contrave can be as a late entrant to the obesity drug market. With Qsymia already on the market and Belviq likely to launch in the U.S. any day now, will Contrave be too late to the game? The answer is: “It depends.”

If Arena and VIVUS manage to achieve tremendous success and develop great patient and prescriber loyalty for their drugs, Contrave could face an uphill battle to gain a foothold. VIVUS recently introduced promotions that appear to be designed to attract and hold on to customers in anticipation of near-term competition from Belviq. With the earliest possible commercial launch of Contrave still over a …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Cardiovascular Systems Completes PMA Submission of Orbital Atherectomy System for Coronary Artery Di

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Cardiovascular Systems Completes PMA Submission of Orbital Atherectomy System for Coronary Artery Disease Treatment

Modular Application Includes ORBIT II Data that Surpassed the Trial’s Primary Endpoints

ST. PAUL, Minn.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. (CSI) (NAS: CSII) , announced today that it has submitted its Premarket Approval (PMA) application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for its orbital atherectomy system, used to treat calcified coronary arteries.

The completed PMA application marks another major coronary milestone for CSI, following the release of ORBIT II pivotal trial results at the recent 2013 American College of Cardiology (ACC) conference. CSI‘s technology produced clinical outcomes that exceeded the trial’s two primary safety and efficacy endpoints by a significant margin—within one of the most challenging patient populations.

“Coronary arterial calcium is a vastly underestimated problem in medicine today, and there is a pressing need for a solution,” said David L. Martin, president and CEO of Cardiovascular Systems. “The ORBIT II results we shared at ACC show that our orbital atherectomy technology may be a viable treatment option for calcified coronary arteries. We look forward to working with the FDA on a potential coronary indication for this most challenging, underserved patient population.”

The company completed ORBIT II enrollment of 443 patients at 49 U.S. medical centers in November 2012. ORBIT II is evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the company’s orbital atherectomy technology in treating patients with severely calcified coronary lesions. This is the first Investigational Device Exemption study in history to evaluate this problematic subset of patients. At ACC, Dr. Jeffrey Chambers of Metropolitan Heart and Vascular Institute, Minneapolis, presented data that showed a 30-day freedom from MACE (major adverse cardiac events) rate of 89.8 percent and procedural success of 89.1 percent (including in-hospital MACE).

According to estimates, moderate to severe arterial calcium is present in nearly 40 percent of patients undergoing a percutaneous coronary intervention. Moderate-to-severe calcium contributes to poor outcomes and higher treatment costs in coronary interventions when traditional therapies are used, including a significantly higher occurrence of death and MACE. Coronary approval would open up a large, underserved market opportunity for CSI, estimated to exceed $1.5 billion annually in the United States.

The FDA agreed to a modular PMA process that allowed CSI to submit the first two modules covering preclinical data and manufacturing/quality systems, while still collecting, compiling and analyzing the clinical data. CSI has now …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance