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Cook Medical’s drug-eluting stent, Zilver PTX gets US FDA marketing nod to treat peripheral arterial disease

Bloomington, IndianaMonday, November 19, 2012, 13:00 Hrs  [IST]

Cook Medical, a global pioneer in medical breakthroughs, has received the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) marketing approval for the first devices in its Zilver PTX Drug-Eluting Peripheral Stent portfolio.

For the first time US FDA has approved a drug-eluting stent to treat blockages in a peripheral artery, a company press release stated.

“This approval marks the start of Cook’s programme to bring the benefits of drug elution to US physicians treating the peripheral arteries,” said Rob Lyles, vice president and global leader of Cook Medical’s Peripheral Intervention division. “No other company can match Cook’s commitment to this technology, and by the end of 2013, we expect to have a full suite of drug-eluting peripheral stents in the most commonly used lengths and diameters available to US physicians.”

The Zilver PTX Drug-Eluting Stent is intended to treat peripheral arterial disease (PAD) in the superficial femoral artery (SFA).

In order to supply as many physicians as possible with this new technology, Cook is making Zilver PTX available initially in 80 mm lengths in 6 mm and 7 mm diameters. The products indications for use also allow two Zilver PTX 80 mm stents to be overlapped to treat longer lesions up to 140 mm. The FDA approval also includes 40 mm and 60 mm lengths, which will be introduced to the US early in 2013. Cook expects to receive regulatory approval for 120 mm length stents in both diameters next year.

Data from Cook’s pivotal clinical trial indicate: Eight out of ten patients treated with Zilver PTX still had open arteries (primary patency) after one year. That compares to only three out of 10 patients treated with angioplasty alone; Patients who received a bare metal stent required more than twice as many reintervention procedures to reopen the SFA as patients who received Zilver PTX.

“After conducting the largest randomized controlled study of peripheral stenting ever undertaken, we now see remarkable results in patients treated with Zilver PTX,” said Michael Dake, MD, a professor in the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine and medical director of the Cath/Angio Laboratories at Stanford Medical Centre, Palo Alto, California.

“With this approval, treating PAD in the US will begin to undergo the same revolution that drug elution did for treating coronary artery disease,” added Gary Ansel, MD, director for the Centre for Critical Limb Care at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and an assistant clinical professor of medicine in the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Toledo Medical Centre in Toledo, Ohio. “Drug-eluting stents such as Zilver PTX will move quickly, in my opinion, to become the standard of care for PAD patients worldwide.”

Cook’s Zilver PTX stent is already approved for sale in more than 50 markets, including the European Union, Japan, Brazil and most of South America, Australia, New Zealand and Taiwan. The device is being introduced to the US market in a five-step process designed to make this technology available to as many patients as possible initially.

Drs Dake and Ansel, who served as global principal investigators for the Zilver PTX clinical trial, are paid consultants to Cook Medical with respect to its medical devices.

A physician gains arterial access through the groin and guides a Zilver PTX stent to the narrowed artery with a catheter. The stent is deployed and expands like a scaffold to help keep the artery open after the catheter is withdrawn. The drug paclitaxel, which coats the stent, is taken up by the cells of the arterial wall to help prevent the renarrowing of the artery over time.

 
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