Covidien Releases Two-Year Study Results Demonstrating Sustained Effectiveness of Drug-Coated Angioplasty Balloon Technology
PARIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 22, 2014-- Covidien’s Stellarex™ drug-coated angioplasty balloon (Stellarex DCB) continues to be shown as safe and effective for treatment of peripheral arterial...
According to The Lancet, 40.5 million cases of PAD were reported in
The ILLUMENATE FIH study is a prospective, multi-center, single arm study designed to assess the safety and effectiveness of the Stellarex DCB. In the study, 58 superficial femoral and/or popliteal lesions in 50 patients were pre-dilated with an uncoated angioplasty balloon, followed by treatment with the Stellarex DCB. When used to treat lesions in leg arteries, the Stellarex DCB is intended to open narrowed or occluded vessels to restore blood flow and simultaneously deliver paclitaxel, the drug used in the balloon coating, to the vessel wall. This helps prevent restenosis, or the formation of new blockages within an artery, after the artery has been treated.
The study found the Stellarex DCB to be safe, with durable results to 24 months, including:
- Primary patency (defined as the treated artery remaining open without further treatment required or renewed blockage detected by ultrasound scanning) was 82.3 percent at 24 months.
- Freedom from clinically-driven target lesion revascularization at 24 months was 87.9 percent. This is the same rate observed at 12 months; no new events were reported demonstrating a sustained low rate of repeat treatment out to 24 months.
- No amputations or cardiovascular deaths were reported.
“We are very pleased with the study’s promising results, as they support the use of an important emerging treatment for a painful and physically limiting condition that affects millions of people around the world,” said Dr.
“ILLUMENATE’s long-term results represent some of the best 24-month patency and freedom from target lesion revascularization rates seen in first-in-human studies to date. “These encouraging, long-term findings suggest Stellarex may be uniquely effective compared with other paclitaxel-based DCBs,” said Dr.
About
1 Fowkes, et al. “Comparison of Global Estimates of Prevalence and Risk Factors for Peripheral Arterial Disease in 2010: A Systematic Review and Analysis.” Lancet 2013 October 19:382(9901):1329-40.
Source:
Covidien
David T. Young, 508-452-1644
Manager, External Communications
Vascular Therapies
david.young@covidien.com
or
Cole Lannum, CFA, 508-452-4343
Vice President
Investor Relations
cole.lannum@covidien.com
or
Peter Lucht, 508-452-4168
Vice President, External Communications
Corporate Communications
peter.lucht@covidien.com
or
Todd Carpenter, 508-452-4363
Senior Director
Vascular Therapies
todd.carpenter@covidien.com