Covidien to spin off pharma business

by JoelLane 16. December 2011 15:57

Pf industry news Covidien, a global supplier of healthcare products based in Ireland, plans to spin off its pharmaceuticals business into a standalone US company.

The spin-off is expected to give the new company better opportunities to commercialise its pipeline and pursue its global growth plans.

Covidien’s medical devices and products business will remain within the existing company.

The company’s pharmaceutical business is a leading supplier of generics, opioid pain medications and bulk paracetamol, as well as such diagnostic products as medical isotopes and contrast media.

The growing pain management drug market is expected to be a major focus for the new company.

“We’ve evaluated whether to separate these businesses for several years, due to the major differences between the medical products and pharmaceutical industries,” said José E. Almeida, President and CEO of Covidien. “We believe that now is the right time to do so because we have significantly improved the operations, performance and pipeline of our pharmaceuticals business.

“While both businesses hold industry-leading positions, they have distinctly different business models, sales channels, customers, capital requirements and talent bases. In addition, their respective innovation pipelines differ substantially in length, regulatory approval requirements, possible risks and potential returns.

“This transaction would give both businesses greater flexibility to focus on and pursue their respective growth strategies, while potentially providing shareholders with greater value over the longer term.”

Covidien plans to distribute shares in the new pharmaceutical company to its US shareholders. The transaction is expected to be completed within 18 months.

Eucomed’s six steps to better medical device regulation

by Joel 2. December 2011 12:29

MB medtech news Industry association Eucomed has proposed a new unified regulatory framework for medical devices across Europe.

The association’s position paper outlines six steps that will ensure patients have rapid access to innovative medical technologies that are value-based and safe.

Consistency, transparency and an integrated approach are the key themes identified by Eucomed as being in the shared interest of industry, healthcare providers and patients.

Eucomed’s position paper ‘A new EU regulatory framework for medical devices’ calls for enhanced member state engagement together with unified and science-based co-ordination of the regulatory system.

While prioritising delivery of high-quality healthcare, patient safety and rapid access to value-based medical technologies, the proposals also aim to encourage R&D and reduce the administrative burden on SMEs.

The association calls for a legal framework to provide a unified regulatory approach to the evaluation and certification of medical devices, with consistent and comprehensive implementation across all EU member states.

Existing bodies such as the European Commission, Competent Authorities and Notified Bodies can be used efficiently to provide a ‘smarter’ legal framework for medical devices, Eucomed says.

The six steps outlined are:

1. Only the best Notified Bodies – better control and monitoring of NBs are needed, including mandatory requirements for designation.

2. A single approach to vigilance and market surveillance – with a centralised reporting and surveillance system based on an EU portal.

3. Stronger harmonised standards – with greater engagement of international experts and earlier involvement of member states.

4. Consistent implementation of guidelines – to make medical device guidance more efficient and consistent across the EU, the current procedure must be revised (e.g. by commitment of member states to uniform implementation) and the European Commission’s current Medical Devices Expert Group (MDEG), which develops guidance, must be upgraded to a formal Advisory Committee.

5. Improved transparency – for better access to information for patients, consumers, healthcare professionals and manufacturers as well as regulatory and legislative bodies, it is critically important to establish a single EU database with information relating to such areas as market surveillance, vigilance and what products are available.

6. An integrated approach – better co-ordination and management, which could be supported by the Commission’s DG SANCO and Joint Research Centre (JRC). The JRC could play a crucial role in such areas as auditing Notified Bodies, co-ordinating vigilance, providing foresight intelligence on health issues, and giving scientific and policy advice to legislators.

John Brennan, Eucomed’s Director of Regulatory and Technical Affairs, commented: “By improving the regulatory framework for medical devices through the six solutions outlined in our position paper, we believe Europe will become stronger in many areas. We suggest many improvements that aid better management of the system by authorities and the Commission.

“In achieving this we think that the JRC is the natural partner for DG SANCO, member states and industry to shape and drive a smart EU medical technology legislative framework, as it is independent and experienced in the broad range of technologies that reflect the medical device industry.”

FDA clears balloon catheters for coronary arteries

by emma 9. November 2011 11:54

Medtech FDA news

The FDA has approved Cordis Corporation’s Empira and Empira NC RX PTCA dilatation catheters for the treatment of coronary artery disease.

Both balloon catheters are designed to allow cardiologists to open patients’ narrowed coronary arteries during angioplasty procedures.

Dr Campbell Rogers, Chief Scientific Officer and Global Head of R&D at Cordis, said that the company “worked closely with physician-customers and incorporated their feedback into the design of these next generation devices. We believe the unique design of the Empira Balloon Catheters will meet physicians' needs and has the potential to improve patient outcomes”.

The two medical devices bring several design and technology alterations to Cordis’ portfolio of Empira balloon catheters. They feature the company’s next generation Duralyn Flex balloon material, which is 50% more flexible than the material used in the current Fire Star and Dura Star RX PTCA dilatation catheters, to improve crossability and recrossability, the ability to pass through a lesion.

Cordis Corporation is a Johnson & Johnson company, and develops and manufactures interventional vascular technology. The company works with interventional cardiologists, radiologists and vascular surgeons to treat patients with vascular disease.

The products are expected to be launched for sale in early 2012.

Medtronic launches spinal stabilisation device

by emma 8. November 2011 16:26

Medtech Product News

Medtronic has launched its T2 Altitude expandable corpectomy device for spinal stabilisation and correction worldwide.

The expandable vertebral body replacement cage features a self-locking mechanism that removes the need for placing a set screw during surgery, using bone graft to create contact to encourage fusion with the device.

Doug King, Senior Vice President and President of Medtronic Spinal, said that the new product demonstrates the company’s “long-term commitment to therapies for complex spine disorders for spinal tumour, trauma and deformity patients”.

Cancer patients can also benefit from the product. If the cancer has spread to the spine, the surgeon may replace the affected vertebrae with the T2 Altitude device.

More than 150,000 spinal fractures occur in North America every year, of which approximately 11,000 are spinal cord injuries.

Based in Memphis, Medtronic Spinal provides advanced treatment through the collaboration with surgeons and researchers to offer affordable, minimally-invasive products and medical technologies for neurological, orthopaedic and spinal conditions.

Better safe than sorry: medical devices and litigation

by emma 4. November 2011 09:36

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What level of medical device failure is acceptable? Brad Abbey argues that the industry needs to arm itself against the threat of litigation – not with lawyers, but with the right kind of evidence.

I was somewhat taken aback by a letter in the British Medical Journal last December, where under the unlikely-sounding title ‘FDA is gold standard of review’, Mark B. Leahy, president and CEO of the US Medical Device Manufacturers Association, while singing the praises of the industry, said that a recent study of FDA-approved medical devices from the past 5 years showed that fewer than 1% had been recalled.

Most recalls, he said, were due to manufacturing and design problems in a post-marketing setting. This was in response to an article that had been highly critical of the safety surveillance of medical devices in the US and the low hurdles that have to be jumped to get a device approved (seemingly true on both sides of the Atlantic).

I am a generalist in the healthcare industry, mainly involved with medicines, but to say I was surprised by that figure is an understatement. I realise that the number of car recalls may be higher – but with a surgically implanted device, the owner cannot check it in at the service centre and pick it up at the end of the day.

I know that MHRA gives daily warnings about medical devices, from wheelchairs to drug-eluting stents; but given that the level of adverse event risk that is acceptable to the public for a medicine is somewhere between 1 in 10,000 and 1 in 100,000, the 1% risk seems difficult to accept.

A lead article in the May 2011 BMJ, by Peter Wilmshurst of STARFlex fame, opened with the comment that the regulation of medical devices is (in his opinion) unsatisfactory, unscientific and in need of a major overhaul. Pretty damning stuff.

 

Duty of care

The registration of medicines requires data on the safety, efficacy and quality of products, and the numbers of patients needed to demonstrate an acceptable risk/benefit profile can be dauntingly high. The same level of scrutiny does not happen in Europe for medical devices, where a single approval can trigger cross-community acceptance.

With the increasing complexity of devices and the high levels of patient expectation, it is hardly surprising that when seemingly good devices go wrong the patients want compensation – and, where there is a suitable arena, for punishment to be meted out.

In the US, where many complex medical devices are developed and initially marketed, the ‘learned intermediary’ doctrine has been used by healthcare product manufacturers in recent times to protect themselves in the event of something going wrong. This doctrine, used in the US legal system, states that the manufacturer of a product has fulfilled their duty of care when they provide all the necessary information to a ‘learned intermediary’, who then interacts with the consumer.

This doctrine has been used primarily by pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers in defence against tort suits. In a majority of American states, the courts have accepted this as a liability shield for pharmaceutical companies.

However, drug and medical device manufacturers sustained an unexpected blow in August 2008 in Rimbert v Eli Lilly and Company: in a federal court decision, for the first time, there was a rejection of the learned intermediary doctrine in its entirety. The decision rejected the notion that the manufacturers of drugs and medical devices do not have to make the patient fully aware of the risks associated with them and that this can be delegated to the prescriber.

The idea underlying the ‘learned intermediary’ doctrine is that the prescriber, who has expert knowledge and skill, should make the decision about risk. But changes in the consumer environment whereby prescription products can be advertised directly to potential patients have rendered this justification obsolete, and so it was predictable that for medical devices – some of them traditionally never coming ‘into the hands’ of the patient – the risk scenario would be influenced by the lesser amount of risk/benefit information needed before approval for marketing. While the doctrine has not been used in Europe, the risk information relating to devices is lagging behind that for medicines.

In order to be vigilant about the risks of medical devices, companies will be best served by surveillance systems that monitor the risk/benefit profile of products from the moment they are first evaluated (even if that takes place in animal models). This is not always easy.

A letter in the BMJ (in the same issue as Leahy’s letter) from a Welsh group of doctors highlights the problems of post-marketing surveillance for medical instruments, and in particular the use of single-use devices for tonsillectomy from 2001 in the wake of the variant Creuzfeldt-Jakob disease that followed the ‘mad cow’ scare of the 1990s.

Widespread adverse events were associated with these non-reusable instruments despite their CE marking, and they were deemed not fit for purpose. The case for reform of medical device regulation therefore seems a given.

 

Hip or lame?

In the meantime it seems that the visible portion of the iceberg of device regulation-related problems is giving rise to a stream of litigation that could possibly become a tide. Recent Medtech Business news reports have followed the fate of orthopaedic company DePuy and its ASR hip replacement.

Hip replacement is one of the clinical successes of the marriage between orthopaedic surgeons and the medical device industry, and it was estimated (before this year’s NHS rationing) that about 70,000 patients were undergoing total hip replacement each year in the UK.

I remember metal-on-metal hip replacements from the 1970s (I have one in a drawer at home that came to me as a result of its breaking), and they became popular again in the 1990s. However, the most recent generation have not fared so well, with higher than expected rates of failure and concerns about excessive levels of metal ions (cobalt and chromium) in the blood of patients.

According to 2010 data from the National Joint Registry of England and Wales, the DePuy ASR Hip Resurfacing System has a revision rate of 12% at 5 years after surgery and the DePuy ASR XL Acetabular System has a revision rate of 13%.

That means that during the first 5 years after a hip replacement with the DePuy ASR hip, at least 1 in 8 patients will experience hip failure requiring painful and expensive revision surgery. With more than 90,000 DePuy ASR hips in patients worldwide, over 11,000 people could require additional surgery due to the defective design of this implant and DePuy’s failure to remove it from the market earlier.

One of the questions that remains unanswered was whether there were potential conflicts of interest between the supplier and the healthcare professionals who developed and were involved in promoting these devices. The key issue in litigants’ minds is that the device did not perform as well as such a device might be expected to, and it seems that the device’s registration in the US was obtained without clinical trials to prove its long-term safety and efficacy. In a litigious society such as the US, where someone must pay for any mistake, the supplier appears to have suffered with the rolling of heads and the decision to remove the offending brand from the market.

Don’t get the idea that this case is a one-off: the recent history of medical devices suggests that arrivals on the market may sometimes be premature, as real risks may not have become apparent. Whether this is related to inappropriate endorsements from the medical profession is difficult to judge, but there are known examples of high-level payments to medical inventors who ‘sell’ their developments to industry and subsequently endorse them.

On the other hand, everyone is aware of what happened to Peter Wilmshurst when he took the opposite stance against a device manufacturer: there was a serious attempt to punish his critical views (which seemed to be well founded) and personally break him through the English court system.

 

Evidence is strength

Litigation against medical device companies is nothing new. However, in an age when people with problems can readily find lawyers willing to take on their problems, and some lawyers (particularly in the US) go looking for people who did not even know they had problems, access to litigation seems to be easier – and it is oiled by the possibility of compensation (which may be deserved when devices turn out to be inadequate or unsafe).

A Google search for the term ‘medical device litigation’ returned 640,000 hits; most of the leading ones were to do with lawyers offering their services in the pursuit of such litigation, or training sessions for lawyers who want to become involved in such cases, or training for companies who want to avoid them. I don’t believe a wake-up call about the risks of being sued is necessary, but what is well worth thinking about is the possible root causes of the current danger, which can ruin a company that believed it had a good product.

The message I am offering is consistent. The products of the healthcare industry must be subject to close and continuous scrutiny for their risk/benefit profile, and this should be done prior to marketing and continue in a structured manner post-marketing. NICE advisory policy on the best devices to use is still in its early stages.

There seems to be a raft of opinion supporting the idea that the regulation of medical devices (in Europe, and probably also in the US) needs to be overhauled to eliminate the placing of devices on the market with inadequate safety and efficacy monitoring.

Rather than finding ways of avoiding expenditure during a product’s development and launch by minimising the collection of such data, companies need to embrace the need for resilient data sets and continual risk/benefit signal monitoring. The competent authorities will wake up to this need, and those with effective systems in place will withstand the culture change best.

Brad Abbey is an industry observer, or the pen-name of an industry observer. The views expressed in this article are those of Brad Abbey, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Medtech Business.

Devices shed light on sinus problems

by emma 1. November 2011 16:49

Relieva Luma Sentry Sinus Illumination System

Two new endoscopic devices launched in the UK promise to improve the success of surgery for treatment of chronic sinusitis.

The Cyclops Multi-Angle Endoscope and Relieva Luma Sentry Sinus Illumination System (pictured) from US company Acclarent give surgeons an enhanced field of view when navigating the sinus.

The sinuses are narrow and tortuous air spaces that can easily be blocked by minor inflammation. Sinusitis affects some 9 million people in the UK, with symptoms including headaches, facial pain, nasal blockage, toothache and fatigue.

The new Acclarent endoscopic devices enable the surgeon to see the natural opening of the sinuses directly, examining many angles with one scope.

These products add to the company’s Balloon Sinuplasty treatment platform, in which a tiny balloon is guided into the sinuses to help blockages.

Since its launch in 2005, more than 120,000 patients worldwide have been treated with Balloon Sinuplasty.

Based in California, Acclarent specialises in products for ENT surgery. The company is a business unit of Ethicon, a Johnson & Johnson company.

FDA approves two spine devices

by emma 31. October 2011 12:09

Spinal USA S-Lok PC Posterior Cervical System

The FDA has approved Spinal USA’s two spinal treatment products, the VAULT Stand Alone ALIF System and the S-Lok PC Posterior Cervical System (pictured, right).

Rich Dickerson, Senior Vice President of Operations for Spinal USA, said that the two medical devices “provide our customers with a wider array of surgical options”.

The VAULT System (pictured, below) is designed for use with autogenous bone graft for intervertebral body fusion of the spine in patients with degenerative disc disease (DDD) with up to Grade I spondylolisthesis, aiming to “reduce surgical trauma and yield a net cost saving”, said Mr Dickerson.

He added that the S-Lok PC Posterior Cervical System offers “surgeons a comprehensive fixation system with enhanced ease of use and greater intraoperative flexibility”, indicated to promote fusion of the cervical and thoracic spine in mature patients in the treatment of DDD, spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, fracture/dislocation, and revision of previous cervical spine surgery and tumours.

Spinal USA VAULT Stand Alone Alif System DDD is characterised by back pain caused by the degeneration of the disc. Spondylolithesis is a condition in which a bone in the lower part of the spine slips out of place.

Cervical spine surgery is intended to restore nerve function, stop or prevent abnormal motion in the spine, and relieve pain, numbness, tingling and weakness.

Mississippi-based Spinal USA provides spine products for the treatment of serious medical conditions, aiming to reduce medical costs.

New sleep apnoea treatment gains CE Mark

by emma 28. October 2011 14:41

Medtech Innovation News

A neurostimulation device that offers sufferers from obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) an alternative to continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy has gained CE Mark approval.

The Hypoglossal Nerve Stimulation (HGNS) system from US company Apnex Medical has been approved for sale in Europe based on the results of clinical studies in the US and Australia that showed the device to reduce the symptoms of OSA.

OSA – an inability to breathe during sleep – is estimated to affect 100 million people worldwide. It causes excessive daytime fatigue and increases the risk of stroke, heart disease and death.

CPAP therapy is the current standard for OSA, but many patients cannot tolerate it or comply poorly with it. The HGNS system offers a radically different approach: an implantable therapy that activates the muscles in the upper airway.

Implanted in the shoulder, the HGNS system measures the patient’s breathing during sleep and delivers mild electrical pulses to the hypoglossal nerve (which controls the tongue) to keep the airway open.

The system can be programmed to operate only when the patient is asleep, or be turned on and off with a hand-held switch.

The Apnex Clinical Study, a randomised clinical trial, is ongoing in the USA, Europe and Australia. It is designed to test the safety and effectiveness of the HGNS therapy in patients with OSA in whom CPAP therapy has not been effective.

“CE Mark approval is an important confirmation of the substantial benefits that patients receive from our HGNS therapy for obstructive sleep apnoea and is a key milestone for our company,” said Chas McKhann, President and CEO of Apnex Medical. “We are excited to bring this innovative new therapy to Europe.”

Based in Minnesota, USA, Apnex Medical specialises in innovative therapies for sleep-disordered breathing.

Medtech market report: France

by emma 28. October 2011 11:30

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France is Europe’s biggest importer and exporter of medical devices. However, current reforms are driving cost reduction and efficiencies. Medtech Business in association with Espicom takes a look at the French market for medical technologies.

France is one of the top five medical device markets in the world, accounting for around 3.9% of the global market.* Within Europe, the market ranks behind Germany and is a similar size to that of the UK.

The country has a well-developed healthcare system, combining public hospitals with commercial clinics that are the main providers of elective surgical treatment. While the public sector is the largest purchaser of most diagnostic and therapeutic equipment, the private sector is the dominant purchaser of surgical equipment and supplies.

The high level of healthcare expenditure (11.8% of GDP) and the substantial health deficit are major concerns that have prompted various reform programmes aimed at curtailing costs and improving efficiency in the healthcare system. For this reason, the medical market is only likely to see moderate growth, rising from US$8.3 billion in 2011 to US$9.8 billion by 2016.

Despite several high-profile investment programmes, France continues to lag behind its European neighbours in some high-technology fields, most notably imaging and radiotherapy equipment. A second five-year cancer plan has now been launched which aims to increase the numbers of scanners.

With flagging domestic production in several sectors the French medical device market is increasingly reliant upon imports, which now account for around 80% of consumption. However, many imported products are re-exported to other countries.

 

The market in 2011

In 2011, the French medical device market (see Figure 1) is valued at US$8,280 million. Consumables is the largest product category, accounting for 20.9% of the overall market, followed by diagnostic imaging (19.8%).

Espicom estimates that the medical device market will grow at an average annual growth rate of 3.5% between 2011 and 2016 – bringing the total market value to US$9.8 billion by 2016.

Orthopaedic and prosthetic devices are expected to continue to be the most dynamic sector of the market, with growth forecast to be more than double the rate for the overall market. Conversely, diagnostic imaging is forecast to have the lowest growth during the 2011–16 period.

 

Predictions for market segments

Figure 2 shows Espicom’s predictions for the major segments of the medical device market.

1. Consumables. The market for medical consumables is estimated at US$1,729 million. The consumables market grew at an annual rate of 5.1% in US dollar terms between 2006 and 2010. Imports supply the greater part of the market. Espicom estimates the consumables market will continue to grow by an average of 3.5% over the next few years.

The wound care products market is forecast to grow at an average annual rate of 2.9% in US dollar terms during the 2011–16 period. Syringes, needles & catheters has been the fastest growing sector of the consumables market and will continue to be, with a CAGR of 4.1% to 2016.

2. Diagnostic imaging apparatus. The market for diagnostic imaging is estimated at US$1,636 million. The market grew at an annual rate of 2.8% between 2006 and 2010. France lags behind its European neighbours in the diagnostic imaging field, though the second cancer plan aims to increase provision of MRI, CT and PET scanners.

Imports supply the greater part of the market, though their market share is lower for radiation apparatus due to the strength of the domestic manufacturing industry. The USA and Germany are the major sources of supply. Espicom estimates that the imaging market will grow by an average of 2.1% between 2011 and 2016.

3. Dental products. The market for dental products is estimated at US$859 million, equal to 10.4% of the total medical device market. The dental products market grew at an annual rate of 4.2% between 2006 and 2010. It is forecast to grow at an annual rate of 3.5% over the next few years, taking the total to US$1,020 million by 2016.

4. Orthopaedic & prosthetic devices. The market for orthopaedic & prosthetic devices is estimated at US$1,336 million, equal to 16.1% of the total medical device market. The orthopaedic & prosthetic devices market grew at an annual rate of 9.2% between 2006 and 2010.

Imports have seen particularly high growth in recent years, though a corresponding increase in exports in this sector indicates that not all imported products are destined for the domestic market. The majority of orthopaedic imports are supplied by Switzerland and the USA.

The orthopaedic & prosthetic devices market is forecast to grow at an annual rate of 6.1% in US dollars over the next few years, taking the total to US$1,794 million by 2016.

5. Patient aids. The market for patient aids is estimated at US$1,131 million, equal to 13.7% of the total medical device market. The patient aids market grew at an annual rate of 4.5% between 2006 and 2010.

French imports of patient aids far exceed the value of the domestic market due to a high level of re-export activity, particularly for pacemakers. Switzerland and the USA are the leading suppliers of portable aids, whilst the USA and China are the major sources of supply for therapeutic appliances.

The patient aids market is forecast to grow at an annual rate of 3.9% over the next few years, taking the total to US$1,367 million by 2016.

 

Imports

The value of French medical device imports has recorded a steady rise over the past decade, reaching US$10.4 billion in 2008 before falling back to US$10.3 billion in 2009.

Imports of consumable items amounted to US$1,780.6 million in 2009. Imports fell by 1.0% over 2008 in US dollar terms (though they increased in euro terms). Syringes, needles, catheters & cannulae are the largest subcategory.

Diagnostic imaging imports totalled US$1,564.0 million in 2009, equal to 15.2% of the total. This was the weakest performing category in 2009, with a fall of 16.4%.

Imports of orthopaedic & prosthetic devices were worth US$1,549.1 million in 2009, equal to 15.1% of total medical device imports. This was the fastest growing category in 2009, with a rise of 26.6%. All three subcategories – artificial joints, orthopaedic appliances and other artificial body parts – recorded strong growth.

Patient aids are the largest import category, with imports worth US$2,624.1 million in 2009, equal to 25.5% of total medical device imports. Pacemakers accounted for 54.7% of imports in this category in 2009, but also accounted for more than half of patient aid exports.

The leading suppliers of French medical imports in 2009 were the USA, Switzerland and Belgium, with the UK ranking eighth as a supplier with imports worth US$288,964 (2.8% of the total).

 

Exports

In 2009, medical device exports registered a 3.0% fall in value to US$9.2 billion, having recorded steady growth in previous years with a CAGR of 6.8% for the 2005–2009 period.

In 2009, 69.5% of all French medical device exports were sent to the rest of the EU, with the Netherlands taking a 17.6% share, followed by Germany with 14.4%. The UK took 6.6% of French medical device exports.

Outside Europe, the leading destination is the USA, which accounted for 9.1% of exports. The USA is the leading destination for French exports of diagnostic imaging apparatus.

Next month, Medtech Business will look at the medical technologies market in Germany.

This article is based on information from Medical Market Outlook reports published quarterly by Espicom Business Intelligence. *All figures are in US $. For further details of the 66 markets covered, please visit www.espicom.com/outlookm1

First app for heart disease education

by emma 27. October 2011 16:11

Cardioteach

Boston Scientific has launched the first iPad app to help healthcare professionals educate patients and carers about cardiovascular diseases and their treatment.

CardioTeach, available free of charge, provides an overview of normal heart function and the therapy options for atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, coronary artery disease, heart failure, heart rhythm disorders and peripheral vascular disease.

The app’s accessible content and graphics (see picture) help the clinician to explain specific conditions and procedures used to treat them, helping patients and their families to make informed choices.

Healthcare providers can also use CardioTeach to mark up anatomical illustrations with cardiac devices, add notes to a page or attach graphics to an e-mail for the patient or carer.

The patient can receive personalised cardiovascular education anywhere, helping them to make decisions and understand compliance and adherence requirements.

“Most medical device apps are designed to educate physicians on a specific product or therapy, said Leslie Saxon, Chief of Cardiovascular Medicine at the University of Southern California. “CardioTeach is unique because it lets clinicians better educate patients about their overall heart and vascular health and available treatment options.”

He added that CardioTeach gives patients “something they can reference after they leave my office and when thinking about or explaining what went on during the office visit,” as well as helping patients and their families “educate themselves prior to and between visits.”

Kenneth Stein, Boston Scientific’s Chief Medical Officer for Cardiac Rhythm Management, commented: “A recent study shows that one in five physicians use a tablet computer in their practice. Creating an app that enables healthcare professionals to use this technology to enhance communication with patients and caregivers is a logical extension of our efforts to empower patients with information about Boston Scientific’s therapies.”

Based in Massachusetts, USA, Boston Scientific is a global supplier of interventional medical devices.

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