Terumo Medical Corporation, a U.S.-based subsidiary of Terumo Corporation, today announced it has received an investigational device exemption (IDE) conditional approval from the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) for its Occlusive/Stenotic Peripheral Artery Revascularization Study (OSPREY) in the U.S., which will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the MISAGO™ Self-expanding Stent System for use in the superficial femoral artery (SFA). This marks the company's first U.S. clinical trial for a premarket approval (PMA) device. A unique feature of the clinical trial is that it will simultaneously enroll patients in the U.S. and Japan. Referred to as "Medical Device Collaborative Consultation and Review of Premarketing Applications" under the larger "Harmonization by Doing" (HBD) initiative, Terumo's trial was selected as one of two projects to pilot this approach, which is intended to shorten the gap between product approvals in these two significant world healthcare markets.
HBD is an international effort to develop global clinical trials and address regulatory barriers that may be impediments to timely device approvals. This process is a cooperative effort to move both Japan and the U.S. toward international regulatory harmonization. The HBD initiative is a pilot project launched in December 2003 that seeks regulatory convergence between FDA and MHLW-PMDA (Japan's regulatory bodies). The learning obtained in the "proof of concept" trials will assist both regulatory bodies in streamlining the clinical trial process for faster approvals in both countries, as well as promote the idea of global trials for purposes of collecting better data. In this pilot HBD approach, the products will be submitted for review and approval at the same time.
"I believe this approach to shorten the time for new product approvals between the U.S. and Japan is critical and exciting," said Takao Ohki, MD, Chairman and Professor, Department of Surgery, Jikei University School of Medicine, Division of Vascular Surgery, and the global principal investigator of the OSPREY trial. "This innovative movement could dramatically solve the current device lag issue between our countries."
In the U.S., OSPREY is a single-arm, multi-center, non-randomized prospective clinical trial for the treatment of atherosclerotic stenoses and occlusions of the SFA. In Japan, there are two arms of the study, 50 patients receiving the MISAGO Stent and 50 patients receiving percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA).
The primary endpoints of the U.S. study are: