| Literature DB >> 29402066 |
Zhen Yu Jia1,2, Hai Bin Shi2, Shigeru Miyachi3, Sun Moon Hwang1, Jae Jon Sheen1, Yun Sun Song1, Joong Goo Kim1, Deok Hee Lee1, Dae Chul Suh1.
Abstract
Since the first use of the Guglielmi detachable coil system for cerebral aneurysm embolization in 1990, various endovascular methods have been developed to treat large numbers of aneurysms. The main strategic and technical modifications introduced to date include balloon-assisted coil embolization, stent-assisted coil embolization, flow diverters, and flow disrupters. The development and introduction of such devices have been so persistent and rapid that new devices are being approved worldwide even before the earlier ones become available in some countries. However, even if some patient populations may possibly benefit from earlier introduction of new devices, the approval authorities should balance the available evidence of the safety and effectiveness of novel devices. This review aims to provide an overview of the recent innovations in endovascular treatment of cerebral aneurysms and a brief review of market access policies and regulations for importing high-risk medical devices, such as those used for endovascular aneurysm management, which correspond to class III devices, as defined by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. We focus on the current situation in Korea and compare it with that in other Asian countries, such as China and Japan.Entities:
Keywords: Aneurysm; Device approval; Endovascular; Korea
Year: 2018 PMID: 29402066 PMCID: PMC5836571 DOI: 10.5853/jos.2017.02229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Stroke ISSN: 2287-6391 Impact factor: 6.967
Figure 1.Current case trends in Korea with data provided by the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Services (HIRA). Number of patients treated with device-assisted coiling and coiling in total (including coiling alone and device-assisted coiling) increase together. Crossover to coiling from clipping occurred in 2013. There has been no significant change in patient number of clipping probably due to higher level of insurance payment for surgical procedure compared to that for non-invasive treatment in Korea.
Information on devices available for intracranial aneurysm management
| Device picture | Device name | Manufacture | CE Mark and FDA approval | Korea/China/Japan market | Brief introduction | On-going clinical trials |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Woven Endo-Bridge (WEB) | Sequent Medical, Aliso Viejo, CA, USA ( | CE Mark (2011); USA (investigational use) | China, clinical trial; Korea and Japan, NA | WEB is a self-expanding mesh that can be introduced into intracranial aneurysms and cover the neck of the aneurysm, resulting in blood flow disruption, thrombosis, and occlusion. | CLinical Assessment of WEB® Device in Ruptured aneurYSms (CLARYS) (NCT02687607) | |
| Medina embolization device (MED) | Covidien/eV3, Medtronic, Dublin, Ireland ( | CE Mark (2014) | NA | MED is a three-dimensional coil with a memory shape, comprising a radiopaque platinum core wire and a braid mesh with petals shape attached to each loop of the core wire. | Medina Embolization Device In Neurovascular Aneurysm Study (MEDINA) (NCT02982200) | |
| Barrel vascular remodeling device (VRD) system | Medtronic, Minneapolis, MN, USA ( | CE Mark (2013) | NA | Barrel is a self-expandable laser-cut stent with a bulged center section designed to treat wide-necked bifurcation aneurysms with a single stent. | The Reverse Barrel™ VRD Intracranial Aneurysm Trial (Barrel) (NCT02125097) | |
| PulseRider | Pulsar Vascular (Codman Neuro), Los Gatos, CA, USA ( | CE Mark (2013) | NA | PulseRider is a self-expanding nitinol implant designed for treating wide-neck aneurysms arising at vascular bifurcations. | Adjunctive Neurovascular Support for Wide-neck Aneurysm Embolization and Reconstruction (ANSWER) (NCT02312856) | |
| pCONus | Phenox, Bochum, Germany ( | CE Mark (2014) | NA | The pCONus is a stent designed to treat wide-neck intracranial bifurcation aneurysms. | pCONus Treatment of Wide-Neck Intracranial Aneurysms (pToWin) (NCT02554708) | |
| pCANvas | Phenox, Bochum, Germany ( | NA | NA | pCANvas is an evolution of the pCONus, with additional membrane coverage of the petals (arrows). | NA | |
| Comaneci | Rapidmedical, Yokneam, Israel | CE Mark (2014) | NA | The Comaneci device is a compliant radiopaque mesh, comparable to a compliant balloon in aneurysm coiling, without the drawback of blocked flow within the parent artery during expansion of the device. | NA | |
| eCLIPs | Evasc Medical Systems Corp., Vancouver, BC, Canada ( | CE Mark (2014); FDA Designating Humanitarian Use Device (2015) | NA | The eCLIPs is a self-expanding, non-circumferential device designed for treating wide-necked bifurcation aneurysms. It has coil retention and flow-disrupting functions. | European eCLIPs™ Safety, Feasibility and Efficacy Study (EESIS) (NCT02607501) | |
| Honeycomb microporous covered stent | Corresponding author: Yasuhide Nakayamany@ncvc.go.jp | NA | Japan, clinical trial | The novel honeycomb microporous covered stents were developed for treating large or wide-necked cerebral aneurysms, with the cavernous sinus portion of the internal carotid and vertebrobasilar arteries as the target treatment regions. | Safety and Efficacy of Honeycomb Microporous Covered Stents (NCVC-CS1) for the Treatment of Intracranial Aneurysms (NCVC-CS1_UAN) (NCT02907229) |
CE Mark, European Conformity Mark; FDA, U.S. Food and Drug Administration; NA, not available.
Figure 2.New devices for intracranial aneurysm treatment. (A-D) Woven Endo-Bridge (WEB) devices: (A) a double-layer, (B) a single-layer, and (C) a single-layer, sphere-shaped WEB device; (D) a WEB double-layer device deployed from a catheter into a bifurcation aneurysm (Copyright Sequent Medical). (E, F) Medina embolization device (MED): (E) deployment of the MED showing the petals of the device (arrows), and (F) fully deployed device showing its three-dimensional conformation (Copyright Medtronic). (G, H) The Barrel stent device: (G) the original shape of Barrel stent, and (H) the bulged center section of the stent provides complete neck coverage in a flow model (Copyright Medtronic). (I-L) The PulseRider device: (I) “T” configuration, (J) “Y” configuration, (K) view from above; (L) PulseRider deployment at the neck of a bifurcation aneurysm (Copyright Pulsar Vascular). (M, N) The pCONus: (M) the pCONus has a stent-like proximal shaft with four distal petals; (N) the four distal loops of the pCONus are deployed inside the aneurysm at the neck level, assisting coil occlusion. (O, P) The pCANvas, an evolution of the pCONus with additional membrane coverage of the petals (arrows in O, Copyright Phenox); (Q) the Comaneci device. The images show the ‘deflated’ and ‘inflated’ status of Comaneci, as well as after removal of the device. (R-T) The eCLIPs: (R, S) the eCLIPs device has a leaf section and an anchor section; (T) deployment position of the eCLIPs device, with the leaf section covering the bifurcation aneurysm and allowing microcatheter access to the aneurysm sac (Copyright Evasc Medical Systems Corp.). (U-W) The balloon-expandable honeycomb microporous covered stent crimped on the balloon catheter (U), completely expanded (V), and removed from the catheter (W). Adapted from Nakayama et al., with permission from Springer Nature [45].
Figure 3.Medical device classification in Korea, China, and Japan.
Figure 4.The regulatory process for foreign medical devices in (A) Korea, (B) China, and (C) Japan. KGMP, Korean Good Manufacturing Practices; MFDS, Ministry of Food and Drug Safety; STED, Summary Technical Documentation; NECA, National Evidence-based Healthcare Collaborating Agency; HIRA, Health Insurance Review and Assessment Agency; MOHW, Ministry of Health and Welfare; CFDA, China Food and Drug Administration; CMDE, Center for Medical Device Evaluation; HFPC, Commission of Health and Family Planning; MIMC, Medical Insurance Management Center; MAH, Marketing Authorization Holder; PMDA, Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency; MHLW, Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare.
Figure 5.Timeline of regulatory process for representative medical devices from Neuroform, Enterprise, and Pipeline in Korea (blue), China (red), and Japan (green). During the period between Neuroform and Pipeline approvals, the processing time for permission increased in Korea. Note the two-step approval process in Korea for the Pipeline as a new device: first by the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (MFDS) and next by the Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW). The reason of import delay for Neuroform in Japan was that Neuroform EZ, the fourth generation device, was first introduced in Japan. Such time delay may also be due to cost differences among countries; Neuroform and Enterprise cost approximately 1,400 USD in Korea, 4,000 USD in China, and 4,200 USD in Japan, whereas the Pipeline costs 9,000 USD in Korea, 13,000 USD in China, and 13,900 USD in Japan. CE, Conformité Européenne (European Conformity); FDA, U.S. Food and Drug Administration; CFDA, China Food and Drug Administration; PMDA, Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency.