Business Wire10.19.17
Avita Medical, a regenerative medicine company specializing in the treatment of wounds and skin defects, has announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a supplement to the company’s Investigational Device Exemption for its ReCell Autologous Cell Harvesting Device. The approved protocol for treatment of burn injuries has been simplified from the previously-approved Continued Access protocol and the number of approved investigational sites has increased from eight to 15.
To date, treatment of patients with the ReCell device under Continued Access was done according to a complex protocol requiring a randomized comparison between two distinct areas of burn injury, with one area treated using conventional skin grafts and one area treated with more expanded autografts applied in combination with Regenerative Epithelial Suspension (RES) from the ReCell device. The newly approved protocol allows for the use of RES with expanded (meshed) autografts without requiring the randomized comparison to a conventional graft. This change makes the protocol more straightforward for burn teams and patients. Furthermore, the Continued Access protocol is complementary to the Compassionate Use protocol in that participants’ burn injuries can range from 5 percent to 50 percent of their total body surface area, whereas the Compassionate Use is limited to the most extensive of burn injuries.
“Based on what we have seen this product do, confirmed by the recent positive analysis of the study results, consenting a patient to have an area of their burn injury treated without ReCell purely for purposes of comparison causes concern from a medical perspective. The new Continued Access protocol, without a comparison, allows us to continue use of ReCell with more focus on what’s best for the patient,” said Dr James H. Holmes IV, medical director of the Burn Center at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.
The Continued Access provision of the FDA’s Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) guidance allows doctors to access a medical device while the premarket approval (PMA) application is under review, if “there is a public need for the device,” and “there is preliminary evidence that the device is likely to be effective and no significant safety concern have been identified for the proposed indication.” The FDA’s principles on granting the Continued Access further state that “it could be contrary to public health to prevent access to potentially safe and effective new devices during an evaluation period.”
The PMA application for the ReCell device was submitted Sept. 27, 2017, and is currently under review by the FDA.
Development of the PMA for the ReCell device has been supported through Avita’s contract with the Office of Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), within the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR), a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Funding support from BARDA has been instrumental in various aspects of ReCell development including execution of Avita’s clinical trials and PMA preparation activities.
Continued Access to ReCell aligns with BARDA’s overarching goal of building national burn care preparedness through increasing familiarity and acceptance of effective medical countermeasures for burn injuries in a mass casualty scenario.
“Continued Access allows Avita to further develop our understanding of the integration of ReCell into the U.S. burn surgeons’ armamentarium, while helping patients and providing a platform for learning for burn care teams,” said Andy Quick, Avita’s senior vice president of Clinical Development.
Avita’s patented and proprietary collection and application technology provides treatment solutions derived from the regenerative properties of a patient’s own skin. Its medical devices work by preparing a Regenerative Epithelial Suspension (RES), an autologous suspension comprised of the patients’ own skin cells and wound healing factors that are necessary to regenerate natural healthy skin. This is then applied to the area to be treated. In all countries outside of Europe, the company's portfolio is marketed under the ReCell brand to promote skin healing in a wide range of applications including burns, chronic wounds and aesthetics.
ReCell is TGA-registered in Australia, and CFDA-cleared in China. In the United States, ReCell is an investigational device limited by federal law to investigational use.
In Europe, Avita's portfolio of medical device products received CE-mark approval as three tailored product presentations, with three individual brand names. ReCell is designed for the treatment of burns and plastic reconstructive procedures; ReGenerCell has been formulated for chronic wounds including leg and foot ulcers; and ReNovaCell is tailored for aesthetic applications including the restoration of pigmentation.
To date, treatment of patients with the ReCell device under Continued Access was done according to a complex protocol requiring a randomized comparison between two distinct areas of burn injury, with one area treated using conventional skin grafts and one area treated with more expanded autografts applied in combination with Regenerative Epithelial Suspension (RES) from the ReCell device. The newly approved protocol allows for the use of RES with expanded (meshed) autografts without requiring the randomized comparison to a conventional graft. This change makes the protocol more straightforward for burn teams and patients. Furthermore, the Continued Access protocol is complementary to the Compassionate Use protocol in that participants’ burn injuries can range from 5 percent to 50 percent of their total body surface area, whereas the Compassionate Use is limited to the most extensive of burn injuries.
“Based on what we have seen this product do, confirmed by the recent positive analysis of the study results, consenting a patient to have an area of their burn injury treated without ReCell purely for purposes of comparison causes concern from a medical perspective. The new Continued Access protocol, without a comparison, allows us to continue use of ReCell with more focus on what’s best for the patient,” said Dr James H. Holmes IV, medical director of the Burn Center at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.
The Continued Access provision of the FDA’s Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) guidance allows doctors to access a medical device while the premarket approval (PMA) application is under review, if “there is a public need for the device,” and “there is preliminary evidence that the device is likely to be effective and no significant safety concern have been identified for the proposed indication.” The FDA’s principles on granting the Continued Access further state that “it could be contrary to public health to prevent access to potentially safe and effective new devices during an evaluation period.”
The PMA application for the ReCell device was submitted Sept. 27, 2017, and is currently under review by the FDA.
Development of the PMA for the ReCell device has been supported through Avita’s contract with the Office of Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), within the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR), a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Funding support from BARDA has been instrumental in various aspects of ReCell development including execution of Avita’s clinical trials and PMA preparation activities.
Continued Access to ReCell aligns with BARDA’s overarching goal of building national burn care preparedness through increasing familiarity and acceptance of effective medical countermeasures for burn injuries in a mass casualty scenario.
“Continued Access allows Avita to further develop our understanding of the integration of ReCell into the U.S. burn surgeons’ armamentarium, while helping patients and providing a platform for learning for burn care teams,” said Andy Quick, Avita’s senior vice president of Clinical Development.
Avita’s patented and proprietary collection and application technology provides treatment solutions derived from the regenerative properties of a patient’s own skin. Its medical devices work by preparing a Regenerative Epithelial Suspension (RES), an autologous suspension comprised of the patients’ own skin cells and wound healing factors that are necessary to regenerate natural healthy skin. This is then applied to the area to be treated. In all countries outside of Europe, the company's portfolio is marketed under the ReCell brand to promote skin healing in a wide range of applications including burns, chronic wounds and aesthetics.
ReCell is TGA-registered in Australia, and CFDA-cleared in China. In the United States, ReCell is an investigational device limited by federal law to investigational use.
In Europe, Avita's portfolio of medical device products received CE-mark approval as three tailored product presentations, with three individual brand names. ReCell is designed for the treatment of burns and plastic reconstructive procedures; ReGenerCell has been formulated for chronic wounds including leg and foot ulcers; and ReNovaCell is tailored for aesthetic applications including the restoration of pigmentation.