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US FDA approves SBi's total ankle replacement system

New York, New YorkMonday, June 1, 2009, 08:00 Hrs  [IST]

Small Bone Innovations, Inc (SBi), a leading provider of innovation, products, technology and education for the small bone & joint segment of the orthopaedics industry, announced that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved SBi's Scandinavian Total Ankle Replacement (STAR) system to treat US patients. STAR has received pre-market approval (PMA) to replace a painful arthritic ankle joint due to osteoarthritis, post-traumatic arthritis or rheumatoid arthritis. STAR has more than 19 years of clinical experience and the current design has been implanted in over 15,200 patients worldwide. Additionally, there have been 35 peer-reviewed clinical outcomes papers published on STAR; SBi believes that this number of papers is more than any other mobile-bearing total ankle arthroplasty device. A U.S. Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) Clinical Trial of STAR was initiated in August, 2000 as a prospective, multi-center controlled pivotal study to compare the safety and efficacy of STAR to ankle fusion (the current standard of care). The study, which followed patients for a minimum of 24 months, is the only US IDE clinical trial to have been completed on a three-piece, mobile-bearing, non-constrained, uncemented total ankle replacement system. More than 670 patients were enrolled in the pivotal and continued access phases of the IDE clinical trial. The lead investigators were Roger A Mann of Oakland Bone & joint specialists, Oakland, CA and consulting surgeon at the Steadman-Hawkins Clinic, Vail, CO and Michael J Coughlin of the Idaho Orthopaedic Institute at St. Alphonsus Regional Medical Center, Boise, ID. Anthony G Viscogliosi, chairman & CEO of SBi, said, "The 'Instructions for Use' and 'Patient Labelling' issued by the FDA indicate that STAR patients had superior effectiveness compared to ankle fusion and had comparable safety results compared to ankle fusion in the clinical trials. No other total ankle replacement system can make this claim." Additionally, Viscogliosi continued, "STAR was less invasive than fusion, with less blood loss, shorter operating time, and better pain relief. We are now able to provide surgeons and their patients with a proven, advanced technology that we believe will change the standard of care from fusion to total ankle arthroplasty." Currently, there are a few 510(k) ankle replacement devices cleared for US marketing as an alternative to fusion. All of these ankle replacements are fixed-bearing devices that limit motion and are indicated for use with bone cement. "STAR is the only FDA-approved total ankle replacement system for uncemented use, which allows for better bone in-growth, stabilization and bone preservation," Viscogliosi concluded. Thomas A Crowley, president of SBi, said, "We expect high patient demand for the STAR total ankle replacement system and we will strategically manage that demand through a controlled introduction and surgeon training, supported by continued long term follow-up of patients for eight years." Roger A Mann, said, "There is already widespread awareness and interest in the STAR ankle replacement among US foot and ankle surgeons. For those of us who participated in the clinical trial and have observed the successful clinical outcomes among our patients, this may well be an important moment in orthopaedics, similar to those we've seen in hip, knee and spine, when the gold standard transitioned from fusion to arthroplasty." Small Bone Innovations was founded in 2004 by Viscogliosi Brothers, LLC, (VB), a New York-based merchant banking firm that specializes in the musculoskeletal/orthopaedics sector.

 
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