13.05.2008 10:00:00
|
St. Jude Medical Announces Start of Landmark DETERMINE ICD Study
St. Jude Medical, Inc. (NYSE:STJ) today announced the initial
enrollments into a new landmark clinical trial designed to better
identify which patients could benefit from implantable cardioverter
defibrillator (ICD) therapy for the prevention of sudden cardiac arrest
(SCA).
The DETERMINE (Defibrillators To
Reduce Risk
by Magnetic
Resonance Imaging Evaluation)
study, coordinated by researchers at Northwestern University and
sponsored by St. Jude Medical, is the first study to look at patients
who already have had a heart attack (myocardial infarction), but whose
hearts are less damaged, to determine if ICD therapy will prolong their
lives. The study is being conducted under a U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) approved Investigational Device Exemption.
About 325,000 Americans die each year – 900
people per day – from sudden cardiac arrest.
Most of them would have survived if they’d had
an ICD, a readily available, proven therapy that re-starts the heart’s
normal electrical activity after cardiac arrest. About half of all
victims of sudden cardiac arrest have previously suffered a heart
attack. The DETERMINE trial will study patients who have had a heart
attack but have not yet had a sudden cardiac arrest, in an effort to
identify patients at highest risk.
"We have the solution for treating sudden
cardiac arrest – the ICD –
but we need a better way to identify in advance those patients who will
have the problem,” said Eric S. Fain, M.D.,
president of the St. Jude Medical Cardiac Rhythm Management Division. "If
we could better predict who these 325,000 victims will be, physicians
could provide them with the life-saving therapy they need.”
Current guidelines require that physicians use "ejection
fraction” – the
amount of blood pumped out of the heart’s
lower left chamber compared to the total amount of blood in the lower
chamber during each heartbeat – to determine
if patients qualify for an ICD. Patients with a low ejection fraction
(less than 35 percent) already qualify for a device. However, most
people who suffer cardiac arrest have an ejection fraction greater than
35 percent and therefore are not currently eligible for the devices.
"Currently the criteria for determining
whether a patient gets an ICD is the ejection fraction, or how much
blood the heart muscle pumps,” said Principal
Investigator Alan Kadish, M.D., Chester C. and Deborah M. Cooley
Distinguished Professor of Cardiology at Northwestern University’s
Feinberg School of Medicine and associate chief of cardiology at
Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. "The
DETERMINE study will evaluate whether the size of a heart attack scar
predicts more accurately which patients can benefit from these devices.
If the results of this study verify our hypothesis, we could potentially
save tens of thousands of lives per year. It could drastically alter the
selection criteria for implanting defibrillators.”
There is an increasing pool of evidence that scar tissue in the lower
chamber of the heart, developed after a heart attack and measured by
cardiac MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), predicts SCA. Two earlier
pilot studies at Northwestern University’s
Feinberg School of Medicine (conducted collaboratively by Kadish and
David Bello, M.D., now with Mid-Florida Cardiology Specialists)
suggested that the size of a post-heart attack scar predicted which
patients would develop a life-threatening arrhythmia.
The DETERMINE trial is designed to investigate these issues by looking
at patients for whom:
The amount of damage caused by a heart attack as measured by the
percentage of resulting scar tissue (or "infarct
mass”) is equal to or greater than 10
percent.
The ejection fraction is greater than 35 percent.
"When we were approached about the DETERMINE
study, we were eager to sponsor it,” said
Fain of St. Jude Medical. "This trial could
help an entirely new population of patients who may be at risk for SCA,
while also providing important risk stratification information for
patients currently indicated for ICD therapy.”
DETERMINE is a prospective, randomized, multi-center study. The first
1,550 patients to meet inclusion criteria will be randomly selected to
receive ICD therapy in combination with optimal pharmacological (drug)
therapy, or randomly selected to receive optimal pharmacological therapy
alone. Enrollment is expected to be completed in 36 months, with
follow-up to occur for another 24 months.
In addition to the two-arm randomized DETERMINE trial, the study will
include a registry of non-randomized patients, which is expected to
ultimately produce the largest database ever of clinical diagnostic
cardiac MRI evaluations of post-heart attack patients, as well as
provide information on how infarct mass compares to ejection fraction in
identifying patients at risk of sudden cardiac arrest. All patient MRIs
will be evaluated at a Core Laboratory located at the University of
California, Los Angeles, led by Paul Finn, M.D.
An ICD is a small device implanted in the chest to treat potentially
lethal, abnormally fast heart rhythms, which often lead to sudden
cardiac death. An ICD delivers potentially life-saving therapy from the
device to the patient’s heart through an
insulated wire or lead.
SCA occurs when the lower chambers of the heart (the ventricles)
suddenly stop beating normally and develop ventricular fibrillation
(VF), a very fast, chaotic heart rate. When the ventricles fibrillate,
they do not contract normally, so they cannot effectively pump blood. In
VF, blood no longer reaches the brain, resulting in sudden cardiac
arrest. If the arrhythmia is not corrected immediately via a shock from
an ICD or an external defibrillator, death will follow within minutes.
The ICD stops the chaotic electrical activity and restores normal heart
rhythm.
Trial Sites Enrolling Patients
Sites that enrolled the initial patients in the DETERMINE Randomized
Trial include: LeBauer Cardiovascular Research Foundation and Moses H.
Cone Memorial Hospital, Greensboro, N.C.; AHS Hillcrest Medical Center,
LLC and Oklahoma Heart Institute, Tulsa, Okla.; and Lutheran Hospital of
Indiana and Northern Indiana Research Alliance of the Heart Center
Medical Group, Fort Wayne, Ind.
Sites that enrolled initial patients in the DETERMINE MRI Registry
include: Lehigh Valley Hospital and Health Network, Allentown, Pa.;
Emory University, Atlanta; Northwestern University, Chicago; North Ohio
Research, Ltd., Elyria, Ohio; Huntington Hospital, Pasadena, Calif.;
Glendale Memorial Hospital and Health Center, Glendale, Calif.; Lutheran
Hospital of Indiana and Northern Indiana Research Alliance of the Heart
Center Medical Group, Fort Wayne, Ind.; LeBauer Cardiovascular Research
Foundation and Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital, Greensboro, N.C.;
Kentucky Heart Institute, Ashland, Ky.; St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital,
Houston; Caritas St. Elizabeth's Medical Center, Boston; University of
Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Neb.; Cornell University, Weill Medical
College, New York City; West Michigan Heart and Spectrum Health
Hospitals, Grand Rapids, Mich.; St. Francis Hospital, Roslyn, N.Y.; and
AHS Hillcrest Medical Center, LLC and Oklahoma Heart Institute, Tulsa,
Okla.
St. Jude Medical Clinical Trials Leadership
St. Jude Medical is committed to supporting scientific and medical
advancements through clinical research, and the number and scope of
clinical trials sponsored by St. Jude Medical demonstrate the company’s
dedication to advancing the science behind new therapies. Landmark
cardiac rhythm management studies include:
Lead Registries
St. Jude Medical has sponsored four comprehensive, prospective studies
evaluating lead performance in more than 7,000 patients. Data from these
studies will be presented at Heart Rhythm Society's 29th Annual
Scientific Sessions in San Francisco on May 15.
Dual Chamber And VVI Implantable Defibrillator Trial (DAVID)
The David Trial compared single-chamber and dual-chamber ICD therapy to
assist physicians in refining recommendations regarding the use of these
defibrillators and their associated pacing functions. The David Trial
demonstrated that for patients with standard indications for ICD therapy, no indication for cardiac pacing, and an LVEF of 40% or less, dual-chamber pacing offers no clinical advantage over ventricular backup pacing and may be detrimental by increasing the combined end point of death or hospitalization for heart failure.
Dual Chamber And VVI Implantable Defibrillator Trial (DAVID II)
The David II Trial demonstrated that the effect of atrial-based pacing
(AAI-70) on event-free survival and quality of life is not substantially
worse than, and is likely equivalent to, ventricular backup pacing
(VVI-40). Atrial pacing may be considered a "safe
alternative,” but affords neither clear
advantage nor disadvantage over ventricular back-up pacing.
Optimal Pharmacological Therapy in Implantable Cardioverter
Defibrillator Patients Trial (OPTIC)
This study found that combining antiarrhythmic drug therapy with
dual-chamber ICD therapy reduces the number of shocks experienced by
patients with ICDs for ventricular tachycardia.
Post AV Nodal Ablation Evaluation Trial (PAVE)
PAVE was the first large-scale study to show the benefits of
biventricular pacing in patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing AV
node ablation. The beneficial effects of biventricular pacing were
greater in patients with impaired heart function or symptomatic heart
failure.
Defibrillator IN Acute Myocardial Infarction Trial (DINAMIT)
DINAMIT assessed ICD therapy for prevention of death in high-risk
patients who have recently had a myocardial infarction (heart attack).
The study demonstrated that ICDs do not reduce overall mortality when
implanted early (within 40 days) after a myocardial infarction.
Defibrillators in Non-Ischemic Cardiomyopathy Treatment Evaluation
Trial (DEFINITE)
The DEFINITE Trial found that patients with non-ischemic heart failure
(e.g. not due to coronary artery disease) who receive an ICD are at
lower risk for sudden cardiac death than patients treated with standard
drug therapy.
Atrial Dynamic Overdrive Pacing Trial-A (ADOPT-A)
The ADOPT-A trial demonstrated that overdrive pacing with the AF
Suppression™ algorithm decreases symptomatic
AF burden significantly in patients with sick sinus syndrome, paroxysmal
AF and standard pacemaker indications.
Alternans Before Cardioverter Defibrillator Trial (ABCD)
The ABCD Trial found that a non-invasive test called microvolt T-Wave
Alternans (which uses computer technology to predict a patient's risk
for sudden cardiac death) is comparable to an invasive and more
expensive procedure commonly used by cardiac electrophysiologists to
determine a patient's eligibility for an implanted defibrillator.
Resynchronization Therapy In Normal QRS Trial (RethinQ)
RethinQ demonstrated that patients with a narrow QRS complex (the time
required for the heart muscle to contract, as measured by
electrocardiogram) and certain measures of left ventricular mechanical
dyssynchrony (when the heart's main pumping chambers do not contract
together efficiently) do not benefit from biventricular pacing (cardiac
resynchronization therapy).
About St. Jude Medical
St. Jude Medical develops medical technology and services that focus on
putting more control into the hands of those who treat cardiac,
neurological and chronic pain patients worldwide. The company is
dedicated to advancing the practice of medicine by reducing risk
wherever possible and contributing to successful outcomes for every
patient. Headquartered in St. Paul, Minn., St. Jude Medical employs more
than 12,000 people worldwide and has five major focus areas that
include: cardiac rhythm management, atrial fibrillation, cardiac
surgery, cardiology and neuromodulation. For more information, please
visit www.sjm.com.
Forward-Looking Statements
This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning
of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that involve
risks and uncertainties. Such forward-looking statements include the
expectations, plans and prospects for the Company, including potential
clinical successes, anticipated regulatory approvals and future product
launches, and projected revenues, margins, earnings, and market shares.
The statements made by the Company are based upon management’s
current expectations and are subject to certain risks and uncertainties
that could cause actual results to differ materially from those
described in the forward-looking statements. These risks and
uncertainties include market conditions and other factors beyond the
Company’s control and the risk factors and
other cautionary statements described in the Company’s
filings with the SEC, including those described in the Risk Factors and
Cautionary Statements sections of the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on February 27, 2008. The Company does
not intend to update these statements and undertakes no duty to any
person to provide any such update under any circumstance.
Der finanzen.at Ratgeber für Aktien!
Wenn Sie mehr über das Thema Aktien erfahren wollen, finden Sie in unserem Ratgeber viele interessante Artikel dazu!
Jetzt informieren!
Wenn Sie mehr über das Thema Aktien erfahren wollen, finden Sie in unserem Ratgeber viele interessante Artikel dazu!
Jetzt informieren!
JETZT DEVISEN-CFDS MIT BIS ZU HEBEL 30 HANDELN
Handeln Sie Devisen-CFDs mit kleinen Spreads. Mit nur 100 € können Sie mit der Wirkung von 3.000 Euro Kapital handeln.
82% der Kleinanlegerkonten verlieren Geld beim CFD-Handel mit diesem Anbieter. Sie sollten überlegen, ob Sie es sich leisten können, das hohe Risiko einzugehen, Ihr Geld zu verlieren.
Nachrichten zu St. Jude Medical Inc.mehr Nachrichten
Keine Nachrichten verfügbar. |