St. Jude Medical, Inc, a global medical device company, on Tuesday announced approval and launch of the HeartMate 3™ Left Ventricular Assist System (LVAS) in India.
"The HeartMate 3 system allows me to offer my advanced heart failure patients an option for their complex heart condition and we look forward to making this system broadly available throughout India," said Dr Kewal Krishan, Program in-charge – heart transplant and ventricular assist devices senior consultant, Max Super Specialty Hospital.
The HeartMate 3 LVAS is a cardiac support option for advanced heart failure patients who are awaiting transplantation, are not candidates for heart transplantation, or are in myocardial recovery.
Kaustav Banerjee, senior regional director of South and Southeast Asia at St. Jude Medical said, "Heart failure remains one of the most costly epidemic diseases in the world, and the HeartMate 3 system is critical to supporting physicians managing the care of patients battling such a complex and challenging condition."
The HeartMate 3 system is the first commercially approved centrifugal-flow left ventricular assist device (LVAD) utilizing Full MagLev™ (fully magnetically-levitated) technology, which allows the device’s rotor to be “suspended” by magnetic forces. This design aims to reduce trauma to blood passing through the pump and improve outcomes for patients.
The device is implanted above the diaphragm, immediately next to the native heart, and is attached to the aorta leaving natural circulation in place while providing all of the energy necessary to propel blood throughout the body.
Banerjee added, “The device has been proven through the CE Mark clinical study to show high patient survival rates, improvements in functional status, and very low adverse event rates highlighted by zero pump thrombosis events"..
Unlike artificial hearts, LVADs don’t replace the heart. Instead, the small implantable devices supplement the pumping function of the heart in patients whose hearts are too weak to pump blood adequately on their own. LVADs can benefit patients either awaiting transplant, known as bridge to transplant therapy, or can be used as a “destination therapy” for heart failure patients who need years of cardiac support but who are not candidates for transplantation.
The HeartMate 3 system received CE Mark approval in October, 2015.