Abbott's heart valve repair device gets FDA advisers' backing
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[February 14, 2024]
By Leroy Leo
(Reuters) - Advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday
backed an approval for Abbott Laboratories' heart valve repair device
that is designed for patients who are at risk of complications or death
during surgery.
The panel voted 13-to-1 in favor of the benefits of using TriClip in
tricuspid regurgitation (TR) outweighing the risks. In TR, the valve
separating the right lower chamber of the heart from the right upper
does not close properly, which can potentially cause heart failure.
TriClip is approved in more than 50 countries, including Europe and
Canada, for treating TR, which typically impacts older individuals who
have multiple co-morbidities, making open-heart surgery a high-risk
procedure and resulting in many people going untreated.
Abbott is seeking FDA approval for TriClip for improving the health
status in patients with severe TR, which means symptoms persist despite
medical therapy.
Its application is based on data from a late-stage study that showed
TriClip significantly improved patients' quality of life.
The condition is estimated to affect about 1.6 million Americans,
according to government data, making the device a key product in
Abbott's pipeline.
FDA's advisory panel meet followed the agency's staff on Friday noting
the lack of signs of reduced deaths or hospitalizations in patients who
received the implant compared with those on medical therapy, but did not
raise any new concerns about the device.
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Abbott Laboratories logo is displayed on a screen at the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 18, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
"It's important to consider what the
alternatives are for these patients and their alternatives are quite
limited. So I think overall, the totality is favorable," said voting
member Bradley Bart, who is also a professor of medicine at
University of Minnesota School of Medicine.
The advisers voted 12-2 in favor of the effectiveness and
unanimously backed safety of the device, which is similar to
Abbott's older device MitraClip that operates in the upper and lower
left chambers of the heart.
FDA's decision is expected later this year.
(Reporting by Leroy Leo and Puyaan Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by
Shinjini Ganguli and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)
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