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New data on Orqis Medical's Cancion® CRS™
to be reported at ACC
Findings will help identify congestive
heart failure patients
for novel 'rest to recovery' therapy
LAKE FOREST, CA
March 7, 2005
Newly analyzed research on Orqis Medical's Cancion® CRS cardiac
recovery system for treating congestive heart failure will be presented
at the Annual Scientific Session of the American College of Cardiology
(ACC), held in Orlando, Florida (March 6-9).
The data suggests that patients with acutely decompensated chronic
heart failure may benefit from the first-of-its-kind Cancion therapy.
Based on Orqis Medical's proprietary discoveries in hemodynamic principles,
the therapy is designed to create a unique "rest to recovery"
environment that enables the failing heart to rest as it continues
to function. It represents a significant departure from conventional
drug therapy and more invasive blood pumps, which either force the
failing heart to work harder, or rest it to the point where it begins
to atrophy.
"The patients we analyzed clearly benefited from the Cancion
CRS therapy," said Michael Zile, M.D., who analyzed the research
data. "By providing continuous aortic flow augmentation, the
therapy enabled patients to experience progressive improvement in
key measures such as cardiac index and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure."
Dr. Zile's oral presentation (AAC 864-8) is titled "Continuous
Aortic Flow Augmentation Using Orqis Cancion Cardiac Recovery System
in Patients with Severe Heart Failure: Determinants of the Hemodynamic
Response." It will be delivered by Dr. Zile on Wednesday, March
9th at 9:45 a.m. The presentation includes data from 24 patients with
congestive heart failure who participated in Orqis Medical's feasibility
trials in the US and Europe.
About The Cancion CRS Therapy
The Cancion (CRS) cardiac recovery system is the first therapy for
congestive heart failure that supplements blood flow specifically
in the descending aorta with the aim of initiating progressive hemodynamic
improvement. Novel use of a blood pump combined with proprietary peripheral
access to the circulatory system enables the Cancion CRS to increase
blood flow without: 1) taking over the function of the heart, 2) requiring
synchronization of the heart or 3) ever touching the heart. The Cancion
CRS received the CE mark in 2001. It is the subject of an FDA-approved
trial at 40 major hospitals nationwide. The Investigational Device
Exemption (IDE) Feasibility Trial (named MOMENTUM for Multicenter
Trial of the Orqis Medical CRS for the Enhanced Treatment of CHF,
Unresponsive to Medical Therapy) began in 2003. Ongoing research is
focused on the therapy's ability to induce vasodilation and improve
renal blood flow while reversing the body's compensatory effects caused
by abnormal aortic flow.
About Orqis Medical
Orqis Medical Corporation is a privately held clinical-stage medical
device company that is investigating its discovery of a new hemodynamic
principle to change the way congestive heart failure is treated. Founded
in 1997, Orqis Medical is headquartered in Lake Forest, Calif. For
more information, visit www.orqis.com.
About the ACC
The American College of Cardiology (ACC), a 31,500-member nonprofit
professional medical society and teaching institution, is the leading
organization dedicated to being an advocate for quality cardiovascular
care-through education, research promotion, development and application
of standards and guidelines to influence health care policy. æ æ æ
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