Corvia Medical’s Atrial Shunt Demonstrates Long-Term Efficacy in Heart Failure Patients: Three-Year Trial Results Published

28 October 2024 | Monday | News


REDUCE LAP-HF II Phase III Trial Confirms 44% Reduction in Heart Failure Events and Improved Quality of Life in Select HFpEF and HFmrEF Patients, Strengthening Pathway for FDA Approval
Image Source : Public Domain

Image Source : Public Domain

Corvia Medical, Inc, a company dedicated to transforming the treatment of heart failure, announced impressive three-year results from its REDUCE LAP-HF II randomized clinical trial confirming safety and sustained efficacy of the Corvia® Atrial Shunt in selected heart failure patients with preserved (HFpEF) or mildly reduced (HFmrEF) ejection fraction. The results were published in The American Heart Journal.

REDUCE LAP-HF II is the world's first phase III trial to evaluate safety and efficacy of an atrial shunt in heart failure patients. The study of 626 patients previously identified a responder group representing half of all study participants. This group consisted of patients without latent pulmonary vascular disease or a cardiac rhythm management device.

At three years, the 161 responder patients receiving the Corvia Atrial Shunt experienced 44% fewer combined inpatient and outpatient heart failure events compared to the control group of 152 patients. The shunt group also reported a clinically meaningful 2.5 times greater improvement in Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ) overall summary score, indicating improved quality of life with less fatigue, reduced shortness of breath, and fewer activity restrictions. No significant safety concerns have been identified with the Corvia Atrial Shunt.

"What we've learned from this three-year data set is that the Corvia shunt results are not only strongly positive but demonstrably durable," said Sheldon Litwin, MD, Alicia Spaulding-Paolozzi Professor of Cardiology at Medical University of South Carolina and a lead researcher in the trial. "The absolute risk reduction for total heart failure events actually improves year by year over the two-year and one-year statistics. And with a majority of patients emphasizing quality of life even over reduced hospitalizations, the importance of the sharply improved KCCQ scores is magnified."

"We are confident that the strong three-year results will generate continued enthusiasm for atrial shunting among referring physicians, positioning it as a promising treatment option for eligible HFpEF patients," said Jan Komtebedde, Chief Medical Officer at Corvia Medical.

"We are actively driving toward completion of RESPONDER-HF, a randomized, sham-controlled, confirmatory trial conducted at up to 80 centers worldwide," added George Fazio, Chief Executive Officer at Corvia Medical, "which we expect to generate the final data set needed for FDA approval of the Corvia Atrial Shunt."

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