09.09.15
BioControl Medical Inc. has completed enrollment in its Inovate-HF (Increase Of Vagal Tone In Heart Failure) clinical trial evaluating the Cardiofit system for the treatment of congestive heart failure. Inovate-HF has enrolled 725 patients at 86 centers in the United States and Europe, making it the largest prospective, randomized device study to evaluate the treatment of heart failure with vagus nerve stimulation.
Launched in April 2011, Inovate-HF is an investigational device exemption clinical study to determine the safety and efficacy of Cardiofit in reducing hospitalization and death among patients with HF by comparing treatment with Cardiofit to standard evidence-based management. The study is randomized at a 3:2 ratio. More than 80 percent of trial patients also have an implantable cardioverter defibrillator and 30 percent of patients have a cardiac resynchronization therapy device.
“I want to thank each trial site and patient participating in Inovate-HF for their role in getting us to this milestone,” said Ehud Cohen, Ph.D., CEO of BioControl Medical. “Their desire and willingness to help us advance the clinical research of the Cardiofit system has brought us closer to offering a new alternative for HF patients.”
Most heart failure patients are treated with prescription drugs that prolong life and improve symptoms, but these medications often delay rather than prevent heart failure deterioration. Cardiofit is being developed to address this unmet clinical need by directly activating a specific part of the body’s nervous system, the parasympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system, to reduce stress on the heart, thereby alleviating heart failure symptoms and reversing heart failure deterioration. The first medical device designed to treat heart failure using neurostimulation, Cardiofit works by stimulating the vagus nerve on the right side of the neck, which regulates such unconscious bodily functions as heart muscle activity.
“Although it’s known that one of the hallmarks of heart failure is an imbalance in the autonomic nervous system, there have been no treatments yet to be developed to specifically and safely target the parasympathetic branch,” said Michael Gold, M.D., Ph.D., Inovate-HF steering committee co-chair, professor and chief of cardiology at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.
The CardioFit system includes a pacemaker-like stimulator placed inside the upper chest and a proprietary nerve stimulation cuff placed on the right vagus nerve in the neck. Using the only electrode on the market specifically designed for cardiac application, Cardiofit’s purpose is to help patients achieve optimal therapy parameters by providing stimulation only when a patient’s heart rate is between pre-set limits.
The primary endpoint of the Inovate-HF study is to compare the number of heart failure hospitalizations and all-cause mortality in patients with Cardiofit versus those on standard evidence-based management. Results of the study are expected by the end of 2016 and will be used to support a Premarket Approval Application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Headquartered in Yehud, Israel, with offices in New Hope, Minn., BioControl Medical makes implantable devices for the treatment of autonomic disorders, conditions whereby the autonomic nervous system ceases to function properly, resulting in a disruption to the control of involuntary body processes.
Launched in April 2011, Inovate-HF is an investigational device exemption clinical study to determine the safety and efficacy of Cardiofit in reducing hospitalization and death among patients with HF by comparing treatment with Cardiofit to standard evidence-based management. The study is randomized at a 3:2 ratio. More than 80 percent of trial patients also have an implantable cardioverter defibrillator and 30 percent of patients have a cardiac resynchronization therapy device.
“I want to thank each trial site and patient participating in Inovate-HF for their role in getting us to this milestone,” said Ehud Cohen, Ph.D., CEO of BioControl Medical. “Their desire and willingness to help us advance the clinical research of the Cardiofit system has brought us closer to offering a new alternative for HF patients.”
Most heart failure patients are treated with prescription drugs that prolong life and improve symptoms, but these medications often delay rather than prevent heart failure deterioration. Cardiofit is being developed to address this unmet clinical need by directly activating a specific part of the body’s nervous system, the parasympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system, to reduce stress on the heart, thereby alleviating heart failure symptoms and reversing heart failure deterioration. The first medical device designed to treat heart failure using neurostimulation, Cardiofit works by stimulating the vagus nerve on the right side of the neck, which regulates such unconscious bodily functions as heart muscle activity.
“Although it’s known that one of the hallmarks of heart failure is an imbalance in the autonomic nervous system, there have been no treatments yet to be developed to specifically and safely target the parasympathetic branch,” said Michael Gold, M.D., Ph.D., Inovate-HF steering committee co-chair, professor and chief of cardiology at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.
The CardioFit system includes a pacemaker-like stimulator placed inside the upper chest and a proprietary nerve stimulation cuff placed on the right vagus nerve in the neck. Using the only electrode on the market specifically designed for cardiac application, Cardiofit’s purpose is to help patients achieve optimal therapy parameters by providing stimulation only when a patient’s heart rate is between pre-set limits.
The primary endpoint of the Inovate-HF study is to compare the number of heart failure hospitalizations and all-cause mortality in patients with Cardiofit versus those on standard evidence-based management. Results of the study are expected by the end of 2016 and will be used to support a Premarket Approval Application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Headquartered in Yehud, Israel, with offices in New Hope, Minn., BioControl Medical makes implantable devices for the treatment of autonomic disorders, conditions whereby the autonomic nervous system ceases to function properly, resulting in a disruption to the control of involuntary body processes.