Medtronic: Training In Study Helped Boost Heart Device Usage
15 September 2009 - 5:27AM
Dow Jones News
A study funded by Medtronic Inc. (MDT) showed that training
aimed at getting doctors to stick to guidelines for treating
chronic heart-failure patients increased usage of expensive,
implantable devices, the company said Monday.
This is a goal for Medtronic, which leads a $6 billion market
for defibrillators that grew rapidly earlier this decade, but has
settled into a modest growth pattern in recent years amid fallout
from device recalls. Manufacturers have been frustrated by the fact
that many patients who are candidates for defibrillators still
never get a device that typically costs $25,000 or so depending on
the features.
Two-year results from the 35,000-patient "Improve HF" study,
which involved 167 U.S. cardiology practices, suggested the
low-utilization issue can be partially overcome through training
programs and other educational materials that reinforce guidelines
for treating heart problems.
These efforts also helped increase usage of heart-failure drugs
and improved patient education regarding their symptoms, Medtronic
said. There was no improvement, however, when it came to usage of
blood thinners to combat a common rhythm problem that can boost the
risk of strokes.
Two-year results from Improve HF were announced Monday at the
Heart Failure Society of America's annual conference in Boston.
Most relevant for Medtronic are study details involving two
types of implanted devices. Cardiac resynchronization therapy, or
CRT, devices constantly coordinate beating in erratic hearts and
often have defibrillators on board to provide shocks when needed to
combat potentially deadly problems. The study also included
implantable cardioverter defibrillators, or ICDs, which are often
idle unless shocks are needed.
Baseline data unveiled two years ago, before any performance
improvement intervention at participating facilities, showed only
38% of eligible patients received CRT devices. But after two years,
utilization improved to 69%, Medtronic said.
For ICDs, roughly half of eligible patients got one before the
intervention efforts, but the number improved to 79% after two
years.
The challenge for Medtronic is to see whether these results can
be replicated outside the study, where a slowly expanding
defibrillator market has in recent years confounded hopes for more
rapid growth based on the large pool of prospective patients.
Device recalls - including Medtronic's recall two years ago of
faulty cables that connect defibrillators to the heart - have not
helped.
How the findings are more broadly applied remains to be seen.
Medtronic can provide resources for the type of training used in
the study, but wants to review such ideas with leading
heart-failure experts, said Marshall Stanton, vice president of
clinical research for Medtronic's heart-rhythm business.
The Improve HF results "can be replicated in other centers,"
Stanton said in an interview.
Shares of Medtronic recently traded up 59 cents, or 1.6%, to
$38.49. Medtronic competes in the market for implantable
heart-rhythm devices with Boston Scientific Corp. (BSX) and St.
Jude Medical Inc. (STJ).
-By Jon Kamp, Dow Jones Newswires; 617-654-6728;
jon.kamp@dowjones.com