With an FDA 510(k) clearance now in hand, Cloudcath Inc. is planning a phased launch of its remote monitoring platform for peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients. The company will make the system available on a limited basis in second half of 2022 “with broad U.S. availability increasing throughout 2023 and 2024,” Cloudcath CEO Aly ElBadry told BioWorld. The Cloudcath system continuously analyzes the dialysate fluid used in PD to detect early signs that a patient needs evaluation or intervention and then alerts both patients and clinicians.
Inspan LLC has won FDA 510(k) clearance for an interspinous fixation system that can now be used to treat lumbar spinal stenosis in non-cervical spine cases of spondylolisthesis, trauma, tumor and degenerative disc disease. According to Aditya Humad, co-founder and CFO of Kicventures Group which counts Inspan among its portfolio companies, FDA clearance represents an expansion in the use of Inspan’s interspinous system into the “highly competitive space” of interventional pain management.
Insulet Corp. received FDA clearance for its Omnipod 5 closed-loop automated insulin delivery (AID) system for patients aged six and older who have type 1 diabetes on Friday, Jan. 28, making it the first tubeless “artificial pancreas” system to get the FDA greenlight. The Omnipod 5 works with Dexcom Inc.’s widely used G6 continuous glucose monitor (CGM) to self-adjust insulin dosing using its Smartadjust algorithm.
Abbott Laboratories received FDA 510(k) clearance for the Ensite X EP system with Ensite omnipolar technology, the company’s cardiac mapping platform. The system, which is used to identify and treat abnormal heart rhythms such as atrial fibrillation, produces detailed three-dimensional maps of the heart to guide physicians performing ablation procedures.
Glaukos Corp. received a green light from the FDA for its Iprime device for the delivery of viscoelastic fluid during ophthalmic surgery, which could help the company to recover some of the revenue lost by cuts to reimbursement for its minimally invasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS) product, Istent. A launch date has not been announced.
Bioventus Inc. has received FDA 510(k) clearance for a device that enables surgeons to remove bone in hard-to-work spaces during minimally invasive surgery. It acquired the company that developed the tool, Great Neck, N.Y.-based Misonix Inc., in October.
The FDA granted 510(k) clearance to Neuronetics Inc.’s MT Cap technology for the company’s transcranial magnetic stimulation system, Neurostar Advanced Therapy for Mental Health. The MT Cap speeds the process used to determine the dose and motor threshold for treatment with the Neurostar system for major depressive disorder (MDD). The company expects to begin a limited introduction of the product within weeks, with national rollout to follow in the first quarter of 2022.
The FDA granted 510(k) clearance to Sky Medical Technology Ltd.’s Geko device for patients with venous insufficiency and/or ischemia. The neurostimulation device is worn at the knee and increases blood flow in lower limb soft tissue of patients. The company said it will initiate a controlled market release in partnership with U.S. clinicians in a bid to reshape venous insufficiency treatment.
The FDA’s regulation of medical technology may be assumed to have a number of unintended consequences, and one of those seems to be the lawsuit between Johnson & Johnson (J&J) and Auris Health Inc. Due to a 2018 FDA policy change regarding 510(k) devices, a robotic surgery system acquired by a J&J subsidiary from Auris was forced into the lengthier de novo premarket channel. This change ultimately helped derail the development effort for the Auris Iplatform surgical system and thus played a role in the $2.35 billion lawsuit alleging that J&J had engaged in fraud in its deal with Auris over the acquisition.
The FDA has granted approval to Urotronic Inc. for its Optilume urethral drug-coated balloon (DCB) for the treatment of male urethral strictures. The device inhibits new scar tissue growth that may form after endoscopic dilations via the controlled release of paclitaxel, an antiproliferative that inhibits scar tissue formation.