The company's dual-modality intravascular imaging system integrates near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) with intravascular ultrasound technology, allowing clinicians the ability to assess vessel structure and plaque composition. The TVC Imaging System is U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved to identify lipid-core plaques that may cause heart attacks. Identification of such plaques would be a major step toward the development of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) as a means to prevent coronary events.
Current PCI imaging technologies are limited in the information they can provide about non-flow limiting plaques that may be dangerous. The results of TVC imaging are presented in the form of a chemogram, an easy-to-read road map of cholesterol throughout the vessel scanned. Several prior studies in patients who have experienced a coronary event have revealed a prominent signal detected by NIRS at the site of the culprit lesion. These studies led to the initiation of the LRP Study to test the hypothesis that a plaque with a large lipid core identified by NIRS imaging is a vulnerable plaque likely to cause a future coronary event. The goal is to prove that vulnerable plaques can be identified by NIRS and provide a target for personalized therapy to prevent coronary events.
“With 1,000 patients enrolled at 41 investigator sites across the United States and Europe, we are excited by the rapid progress of the LRP Study,” said Ron Waksman, M.D., principal investigator of the LRP Study. “Once complete, the LRP Study data could redefine the role of intravascular imaging and lay the groundwork for changing standard protocols for managing coronary artery disease.”
The TVC Imaging System is a first-in-class dual-modality intravascular imaging system that potentially can improve the management of coronary artery disease by providing information that is critical for evaluating vessel structure and plaque composition, also known as true vessel characterization. The TVC Imaging System may help interventional cardiologists identify which patients are prone to complications during stenting. The device may enable cardiologists to predict the risk of peri-procedural heart attacks by assessing not only the degree of stenosis, but also the presence and extent of lipid-core plaques (LCP).
The device is the only multimodality imaging system to combine both intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and NIRS, the company claims. Through Extended Bandwidth IVUS technology, the Advanced TVC Imaging System harmonizes multiple signal frequencies, resulting in a sharp image of the complete vessel allowing for easy identification of the lumen, plaque and vessel structure. The TVC Imaging System is the only device specifically approved in both the United States and Europe for the detection of lipid-core plaques, Infraredx bigwigs said. NIRS-IVUS measurements have been made in more than 15,000 patients in more than 150 hospitals worldwide.
Infraredx is a privately-funded medical device company that develops coronary artery disease treatments. Founded in 1998, the company is headquartered in Burlington, Mass.