Invatec, a comprehensive innovator of interventional products, today announced that it has received 510(k) clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to market its Mo.Ma® Ultra Proximal Cerebral Protection Device for use during carotid artery stenting (CAS). The device effectively reduces and captures debris released during the stenting procedure to prevent it from traveling to the brain, where it has the potential to cause a stroke.
“We are very pleased to announce the completion of the ARMOUR trial and FDA clearance of Mo.Ma Ultra,” commented Andrea Venturelli and Stefan Widensohler, co-founders of Invatec. “We look forward to bringing this important product to the world’s largest market. Mo.Ma Ultra offers US physicians and patients a tremendously safe and easy-to-use new option for embolic protection during the treatment of carotid stenoses.”
Carotid stenting, a procedure that inserts wire mesh tubes to prop open the arteries and improve blood flow, is a common treatment for carotid artery disease, a condition caused by buildup of fatty substances and plaque. When the carotid arteries are obstructed, patients are at an increased risk for stroke, the third leading cause of death in the U.S. Mo.Ma Ultra is a proximal protection device, which establishes full-time cerebral protection and control during the carotid stenting procedure prior to crossing the internal carotid artery (ICA) lesion, thereby preventing distal embolization. Small balloons on the tip and proximal shaft are inflated in the external carotid artery and the common carotid artery to suspend blood flow during the stenting process. These balloons act like endovascular surgical clamps, protecting the brain during the procedure. However the easy-to-use percutaneous Mo.Ma Ultra requires no surgery. Guide wires, stents and balloon catheters are used in this protected environment to treat the target lesion through the Mo.Ma Ultra Device, which provides stability, control and access to the internal carotid artery like a guiding catheter or sheath. The suspended blood is then aspirated along with any embolic debris to complete the procedure safely.
L. Nelson Hopkins, MD, of State University of New York in Buffalo and co-principal investigator of the ARMOUR trial stated, “Proximal embolic protection is an important advance that gives us more options in the treatment of carotid artery disease. The Mo.Ma Ultra combines the advantages of carotid endarterectomy with the minimally invasive benefits of carotid artery stenting.”
ARMOUR CLINICAL TRIAL RESULTS
Dr. Hopkins reported results of the pivotal, multi-center, non-randomized ARMOUR trial at VIVA 2009 in Las Vegas during the conference’s late-breaking trials session on Thursday, October 22.