http://www.theheart.org/article/141...medium=email&utm_source=20120613_breakingNews
Gaithersburg, MD - A panel of expert advisors to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) emphatically agrees: approved uses for the Sapien transcatheter valve (Edwards Lifesciences) should include high-risk aortic-stenosis patients who are also eligible for surgery.
In the three-part vote, the panel voted 12:0 that the device was effective, 10:2 that the device is safe, and delivered 11 votes in favor of the statement that its benefits outweighed any risks (one panel member abstained on this question).
Approval of this indication would also usher in the company's transapical delivery system, allowing the device to be deployed in patients whose femoral artery is not suited to transcatheter delivery of the percutaneous valve.
Grounds for expanding the indications for transcatheter aortic-valve replacement (TAVR) with the Sapien device come from the PARTNER A trial, as reported by heartwire. In the study, one-year mortality was similar between the surgery and TAVR groups at 26.8% and 24.2%, respectively, meeting the predefined margin for noninferiority for TAVR.
Throughout the day, the Circulatory System Devices Panel raised concerns over crossover data and how events were assigned to the different treatments, as well as the challenges of interpreting nonrandomized continued-access patients treated after the PARTNER data closed. Panel members also mulled the higher mortality rate among patients treated via the transapical route, as compared to those treated via transfemoral delivery or by conventional open surgical replacement.
Other trial conduct issues also spent some time in the spotlight, including stroke risk; delays to treatment among patients randomized to surgical aortic-valve replacement (AVR); the importance of aortic insufficiency (seen in almost 60% of TAVR patients at one year) to long-term outcomes; and the curious discrepancy between men and women in the trial.
Mid-afternoon, the panel wrestled with issues like risk-scoring, comorbidities, and frailty, trying to put a finger on just what kind of patient could be considered fairly for either treatment approach.
Ultimately the panel agreed that the ability to offer a transcatheter approach to high-risk patients superseded their niggling concerns.... more at link
Gaithersburg, MD - A panel of expert advisors to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) emphatically agrees: approved uses for the Sapien transcatheter valve (Edwards Lifesciences) should include high-risk aortic-stenosis patients who are also eligible for surgery.
In the three-part vote, the panel voted 12:0 that the device was effective, 10:2 that the device is safe, and delivered 11 votes in favor of the statement that its benefits outweighed any risks (one panel member abstained on this question).
Approval of this indication would also usher in the company's transapical delivery system, allowing the device to be deployed in patients whose femoral artery is not suited to transcatheter delivery of the percutaneous valve.
Grounds for expanding the indications for transcatheter aortic-valve replacement (TAVR) with the Sapien device come from the PARTNER A trial, as reported by heartwire. In the study, one-year mortality was similar between the surgery and TAVR groups at 26.8% and 24.2%, respectively, meeting the predefined margin for noninferiority for TAVR.
Throughout the day, the Circulatory System Devices Panel raised concerns over crossover data and how events were assigned to the different treatments, as well as the challenges of interpreting nonrandomized continued-access patients treated after the PARTNER data closed. Panel members also mulled the higher mortality rate among patients treated via the transapical route, as compared to those treated via transfemoral delivery or by conventional open surgical replacement.
Other trial conduct issues also spent some time in the spotlight, including stroke risk; delays to treatment among patients randomized to surgical aortic-valve replacement (AVR); the importance of aortic insufficiency (seen in almost 60% of TAVR patients at one year) to long-term outcomes; and the curious discrepancy between men and women in the trial.
Mid-afternoon, the panel wrestled with issues like risk-scoring, comorbidities, and frailty, trying to put a finger on just what kind of patient could be considered fairly for either treatment approach.
Ultimately the panel agreed that the ability to offer a transcatheter approach to high-risk patients superseded their niggling concerns.... more at link