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Two Trevo clot retrieval devices can now be marketed as an initial therapy to reduce paralysis from strokes that are caused by blood clots, according to a press release from the Food and Drug Administration.
Previously, the only first-line treatment approved for acute ischemic stroke was tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) delivered intravenously. The FDA approved Trevo devices based on a clinical trial in which 29% of patients treated with the Trevo device combined with TPA and medical management of blood pressure and disability symptoms were shown to be functionally independent 3 months after their stroke, compared with only 19% of patients treated with TPA plus medical management alone.
The Trevo devices are approved for usage within 6 hours of symptom onset and only following treatment with TPA, which should be administered within 3 hours of stroke onset. Associated risks with Trevo device usage include failure to retrieve the blood clot, device malfunctions including breakage and navigation difficulties, potential damage of blood vessels, and the chance of perforation or hemorrhage.
The Trevo device was first approved by the FDA in 2012 to remove blood clots in order to restore blood flow in stroke patients who could not receive TPA or for those patients who did not respond to TPA therapy. The current approval expands the devices’ indication to a broader group of patients, according to the release.
“This is the first time FDA has allowed the use of these devices alongside TPA, which has the potential to help further reduce the devastating disabilities associated with strokes compared to the use of TPA alone. Now health care providers and their patients have another tool for treating stroke and potentially preventing long-term disability,” Carlos Peña, PhD, director of the division of neurological and physical medicine devices at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in the press release.
Find the full press release on the FDA website.
Two Trevo clot retrieval devices can now be marketed as an initial therapy to reduce paralysis from strokes that are caused by blood clots, according to a press release from the Food and Drug Administration.
Previously, the only first-line treatment approved for acute ischemic stroke was tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) delivered intravenously. The FDA approved Trevo devices based on a clinical trial in which 29% of patients treated with the Trevo device combined with TPA and medical management of blood pressure and disability symptoms were shown to be functionally independent 3 months after their stroke, compared with only 19% of patients treated with TPA plus medical management alone.
The Trevo devices are approved for usage within 6 hours of symptom onset and only following treatment with TPA, which should be administered within 3 hours of stroke onset. Associated risks with Trevo device usage include failure to retrieve the blood clot, device malfunctions including breakage and navigation difficulties, potential damage of blood vessels, and the chance of perforation or hemorrhage.
The Trevo device was first approved by the FDA in 2012 to remove blood clots in order to restore blood flow in stroke patients who could not receive TPA or for those patients who did not respond to TPA therapy. The current approval expands the devices’ indication to a broader group of patients, according to the release.
“This is the first time FDA has allowed the use of these devices alongside TPA, which has the potential to help further reduce the devastating disabilities associated with strokes compared to the use of TPA alone. Now health care providers and their patients have another tool for treating stroke and potentially preventing long-term disability,” Carlos Peña, PhD, director of the division of neurological and physical medicine devices at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in the press release.
Find the full press release on the FDA website.
Two Trevo clot retrieval devices can now be marketed as an initial therapy to reduce paralysis from strokes that are caused by blood clots, according to a press release from the Food and Drug Administration.
Previously, the only first-line treatment approved for acute ischemic stroke was tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) delivered intravenously. The FDA approved Trevo devices based on a clinical trial in which 29% of patients treated with the Trevo device combined with TPA and medical management of blood pressure and disability symptoms were shown to be functionally independent 3 months after their stroke, compared with only 19% of patients treated with TPA plus medical management alone.
The Trevo devices are approved for usage within 6 hours of symptom onset and only following treatment with TPA, which should be administered within 3 hours of stroke onset. Associated risks with Trevo device usage include failure to retrieve the blood clot, device malfunctions including breakage and navigation difficulties, potential damage of blood vessels, and the chance of perforation or hemorrhage.
The Trevo device was first approved by the FDA in 2012 to remove blood clots in order to restore blood flow in stroke patients who could not receive TPA or for those patients who did not respond to TPA therapy. The current approval expands the devices’ indication to a broader group of patients, according to the release.
“This is the first time FDA has allowed the use of these devices alongside TPA, which has the potential to help further reduce the devastating disabilities associated with strokes compared to the use of TPA alone. Now health care providers and their patients have another tool for treating stroke and potentially preventing long-term disability,” Carlos Peña, PhD, director of the division of neurological and physical medicine devices at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in the press release.
Find the full press release on the FDA website.