News | Cardiovascular Clinical Studies | April 16, 2024

CVRx Announces Availability of Additional Data Supporting Long-term Benefits of Barostim

BeAT-HF trial data published in the European Journal of Heart Failure and new abstracts presented at THT conference

Investigational technology designed for patients undergoing emerging large bore percutaneous catheter-based venous interventional procedures

April 16, 2024 — CVRx, Inc., a commercial-stage medical device company, announced today the availability of additional data, including the publication of results of the post-market phase of the BeAT-HF trial in the European Journal of Heart Failure. These data highlight long-term sustained benefits of Barostim in heart failure patients with reduced ejection fraction.

“Publication of these data from the post-market phase of BeAT-HF in this prestigious peer-reviewed journal allows for more effective dissemination of the long-term results of this important trial and the positive symptomatic impact of Barostim on patients with heart failure,” said Kevin Hykes, President and CEO of CVRx. “Additionally, we are pleased at the favorable physician response to new abstracts released at THT in Boston on March 5, 2024, that show a reduction in additional heart failure interventions in patients with Barostim, as well as specific patient-centered benefits at long-term follow-up.”

The manuscript is available online at the European Journal of Heart Failure website. CVRx previously announced some of these data as part of expanded labeling granted by FDA on December 23, 2023. The key benefits of Barostim contained in the manuscript include the following:

  • There was not a statistically significant difference in the primary endpoint of CV death and HF hospitalization, demonstrating that the benefits of the therapy do not increase the long-term risk of harm to patients
  • Patients receiving Barostim + guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) had sustained and significant symptomatic improvements (6 minute hall walk, quality of life and NYHA class) at up to 2 years versus those patients receiving GDMT alone
  • Patients receiving Barostim + GDMT had a 34% reduced likelihood of all-cause death or the need for left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation or heart transplant, suggesting a favorable effect of Barostim therapy

Additionally, two new post-hoc analyses of the BeAT-HF trial data, presented on March 5, 2024 at Technology in Heart Failure Therapeutics (THT) 2024 in Boston, suggest additional important benefits of Barostim.

  • Dr. William Abraham of the Ohio State Wexner College of Medicine presented analysis showing that patients in the trial with Barostim + GDMT had a 74% reduced risk of receiving advanced heart failure interventions (transplant, LVAD, CCM, CRT or CardioMEMS) at long-term follow-up versus patients on GDMT alone. See more details at TCTMD.
  • Dr. JoAnn Lindenfeld of Vanderbilt University presented analysis showing that patients with Barostim + GDMT had sustained and significant improvements in quality-of-life scores (MLWHF and EQ-5D) and many subdomains of these scores (e.g., reductions in shortness of breath, fatigue, depression and improvements in self-care, mobility and pain, etc.) versus patients on GDMT alone. See more details at TCTMD.

“We are grateful to the BeAT-HF executive steering committee and the many investigators involved in the trial for their dedication to advancing the science supporting this therapy. We look forward to the generation of additional evidence about Barostim from the BeAT-HF trial, as well as from real-world experience through our REBALANCE post-market registry and investigator-initiated research,” said Hykes.

For more information: www.cvrx.com

 

Related content:

Totality of Evidence from BeAT-HF Study Shows CVRx’s Barostim Provides Long-term Benefits for Patients with Heart Failure

CVRx Reports Preliminary Results of the BeAT-HF Post-Market Randomized Clinical Trial

Allegheny Health Network Cardiovascular Institute First in Pittsburgh to Implant Groundbreaking Neuromodulation Device as Alternative Therapy for Heart Failure Patients

Device Technologies to Reduce Heart Failure Readmissions 

Heart Rhythm Society 2019 Late-Breaking Clinical Trials 


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