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DuraSealTM Dural Sealant System PMA P040034
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Presenters Vice President, Clinical, Regulatory, and Quality
Eric Ankerud, J.D. – Confluent Surgical, Inc. Vice President, Clinical, Regulatory, and Quality Patrick Campbell, Ph.D. – Confluent Surgical, Inc. Vice President, Research & Development John Tew, M.D. – Mayfield Clinic Professor, Department of Neurosurgery, University of Cincinnati G. Rees Cosgrove, M.D. – Massachusetts General Hospital Associate Professor of Surgery, Harvard Medical School Harry van Loveren, M.D. –Tampa General Hospital Professor and Chairman, Director of Skull Base and Cerebrovascular Surgery, University of South Florida
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Presentation Overview
Project Overview – Eric Ankerud, J.D. Technology Overview – Pat Campbell, Ph.D. Project Rationale – John Tew, M.D. US Pivotal Trial Results – G. Rees Cosgrove, M.D. Safety Evaluation – Harry van Loveren, M.D.
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Company Overview Mission: Development of in-situ polymerized biomaterials to address the unmet needs of surgical wound healing including surgical tissue sealing, post surgical adhesion prevention, and hemostasis Founded: 1998 People: 30 employees Facility: Waltham, Massachusetts Products: Commercially available OUS
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DuraSeal Dural Sealant System
Thumb piece Syringes (2) Sprayer Components Powder Vial
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Pre-Clinical Summary DuraSeal is non-toxic and safe, up to 40X human dose DuraSeal is not neurotoxic, and allows complete neodura formation Intraoperative and postoperative sealing efficacy demonstrated in relevant canine model Ability to image DuraSeal has been demonstrated, and has complete absorption over 8 weeks
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“Water Tight” Closure Remains Elusive
Achieving “water tight” closure is basic tenet of neurosurgical practice Controlling intraoperative leakage is important to prevent CSF leakage and development of postoperative complications: Suture pinholes and space between sutures act as “one-way” valve for CSF leakage Subdural collections of CSF fluid may develop into pseudomeningoceles and overt incisional leaks with potential for serious post-operative sequelae Suture pinholes and space between sutures act as “one-way” valve for CSF leakage Subdural collections of CSF fluid may develop into pseudomeningoceles and overt incisional leaks with potential for serious post-operative sequelae
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CSF Leak Causes Postoperative Morbidity
Meningitis – may lead to delayed neurologic complications Prolonged hospitalization and increased patient cost Interference with wound healing (dehiscence) Abscess formation Additional surgical intervention often required Speak to placement of lumbar drains and LP shunts as surgical interventions taken. Find reference for cost of CSF leak Risk factor for development of meningitis/abscess (relative risk 16.0) Korinek et al. Meningitis most frequent and severe complication and is associated with high mortality rate (1-20%) Shaffrey et al.
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Methods For Sealing Sutured Dural Closure
Current Methods FDA-Approved Devices Products Used Off Label None NO STANDARD OF CARE Fibrin Sealant (e.g. Tisseel) Absorbable gelatin (e.g. Gelfoam) Collagen hemostatic agents (e.g. Surgicel) Other bioadhesives (e.g. BioGlue) Dr. Tew to speak to the fact that none of the products listed actually work for dural sealing. Speaking points – BioGlue toxicity Integra’s products
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US Pivotal Study Objective
To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the DuraSeal Dural Sealant System as an adjunct to sutured dural repair during cranial surgery to provide watertight closure
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Study Design Prospective Multi-center Non-randomized, single arm study
11 participating sites 10 United States 1 Europe
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Follow-up Compliance Patients Enrolled n=132
Intra-operative Screen Failures n=21 Patients Treated with DuraSeal n=111 Immediate Post-operative Visit (within 7 days of surgery) n=111 100% of patients evaluated Patient Death n=1 at 27 days Post-op 6 Week Visit n=110 99% of patients evaluated Patient Death n=1 at 85 days Post-op Lost to Follow-up n=2 3 Month Visit n=107 98% of patients evaluated
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Primary Efficacy Analysis-Intraoperative Sealing Success
Results Intent To Treat* (includes 2 non-evaluable patients) 98.2% (109*/111) [95% CI: ] Per Protocol (includes all evaluable patients) 100% (109/109) [95% CI: ] * Two patients had no leak after Valsalva maneuver, but pressure reached was only to 10 cm H2O and, therefore, were not evaluable
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Summary Primary efficacy endpoint was met
Adverse events consistent in nature, frequency and severity for patients undergoing cranial surgery
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Conclusion In the patient population evaluated, the benefits associated with the use of the DuraSeal Sealant outweigh any potential risks associated with the use of the device
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