Clinical evidence presented at ACC.23/WCC highlights how
utilization of Philips cardiology solutions is improving the
quality and efficiency of patient care
March 6, 2023
- Preliminary results of large-scale real-world data study of
Medicare patients conclude that use of intravascular imaging (IVI)
during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures grew 62%
between 2013 and 2019, and is associated with lower incidence of
mortality, acute myocardial infarction (MI), repeat PCI, and major
adverse cardiac event (MACE)
- Largest real-world Medicare analysis of Cardiac Implantable
Electronic Device (CIED) infection treatment in more than 1 million
patients shows that early removal of infected cardiac implantable
electronic devices (CIEDs), for which Philips developed the Philips
Laser Sheath – GlideLight – and Philips Mechanical Rotating Dilator
Sheath – TightRail, substantially improves healthcare utilization
and reduces hospital costs
- Multi-center, prospective, observational study demonstrates the
safety and procedural efficiency of Philips Intracardiac
Echocardiography (ICE) Catheter – VeriSight Pro 3D
ICE
Amsterdam, the Netherlands – Royal Philips
(NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), a global leader in health technology, today
announced the presentation of various clinical study results at
this year’s Annual Scientific Session & Expo of the American
College of Cardiology/World Congress of Cardiology event
(ACC.23/WCC, March 4 – 6, New Orleans, USA) that confirm Philips’
commitment to clinically validating its innovations in cardiac and
cardiovascular care.
- Initial results from a high-quality real-world evidence study
of Medicare data (inpatient and outpatient, 2013-2019) by Dr. Eric
Secemsky, Director of Vascular Intervention at Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC, Boston, MA, USA), that analyzed
over a million patients to evaluate trends in the use of,
and outcomes associated with, intravascular imaging (IVI) during
percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures were
presented by Dr. Reza Fazel, Interventional Cardiologist at
BIDMC.
- Dr. Sean Pokorney, Assistant Professor of Medicine and Member
of the Duke Clinical Research Institute at Duke University School
of Medicine (Durham, NC, USA), presented the results of a study
that quantified the improved healthcare utilization and
reduced hospital costs associated with early removal of infected
cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs).
- A presentation by Dr. Mohamad Alkhouli, Professor of Medicine
at Mayo Clinic School of Medicine (Rochester, MN, USA) detailed the
results of a study that demonstrated the
real-world safety and performance of Philips Intracardiac
Echocardiography Catheter – VeriSight Pro 3D ICE – during
a range of image-guided minimally-invasive cardiac procedures.
“To make a real difference to patients, it is vitally important
that medical innovations are validated in real-life clinical
practice so that clinician decision-making and guideline setting
are firmly evidence-based. At Philips, we are deeply committed to
making sure this is the case,” said Dr. Atul Gupta, Chief Medical
Officer for Image-Guided Therapy at Philips. “The positive clinical
study results announced today are further evidence of how we are
continuously working with our clinical partners to co-create new
innovations and demonstrate how they improve outcomes for
patients.”
Reduced risk of one-year mortality when intravascular
imaging used during PCI proceduresDr. Eric Secemsky at
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and his collaborators
conducted a high-quality real-world evidence study of Medicare data
for over one million patients undergoing PCI procedures between
January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2019. The preliminary results,
which were presented at ACC.23/WCC by Dr. Reza Fazel, reveal that
the use of intravascular imaging (IVI) technologies as an adjunct
to angiography rose by 62% during the period and is associated with
superior patient outcomes. The potential for further strong growth
is supported by a recent review published in the Journal of the
American College of Cardiology (JACC), which “advocates broader use
of these technologies as a part of contemporary practice” and
recommends that “IVI capability should be included in all U.S. CCLs
[cardiac catheterization laboratories]” [1]. Dr. Fazel’s
presentation highlighted some of the benefits that could accrue
from such a move. The retrospective real-world study showed that
IVI use during PCI procedures was associated with lower rates of
one-year mortality (Hazard Ratio 0.96, 95% CI 0.94-0.98)**,
myocardial infarction (MI), repeat PCI procedures, and major
adverse cardiac event (MACE). It is one of the first studies to
include outpatient procedures, which accounted for 43.3% of all the
PCIs included in the analysis.
Philips’ IVI offering comprises a range of intravascular
ultrasound (IVUS) catheters, co-registration and automated
measurement tools for use on Philips Image-Guided Therapy System –
Azurion, designed to help cardiologists decide, guide, and confirm
the right interventional treatment for each patient. The patient
benefits of these tools have already been demonstrated in multiple
clinical studies. The JACC review paper referred to above states
that IVUS is “the more flexible of the options and is the one that
can be utilized in almost all clinical scenarios” [1].
Timely removal of infected CIEDs The CIED
Infection Medicare Study* of clinical practice was conducted by Dr.
Sean Pokorney and his team at the Duke Clinical Research Institute,
which analyzed the records of more than one million CIED implant
patients in the ‘U.S. 100% Medicare fee-for-service’ population
covering the period January 1, 2006, to December 31, 2019.
The study represented a nationwide analysis of CIED infection
care, and as already reported by Dr. Pokorney at last year’s ACC
(ACC.22) [2], demonstrated that approximately 4 in 5 patients were
not treated [2] according to ACC/AHA/HRS/EHRA Class I consensus
recommendations and guidelines for CIED infection, which recommend
full system extraction ideally within 3 days [3,4]. Of the 9,867
patients diagnosed with a CIED infection 12 months or more after
implantation, only 13.3% underwent extraction within six days and
only 5.2% between seven and 30 days.
“This data highlights a major gap in care among our CIED
infection patients, which results in higher mortality, more health
care utilization, and higher cost of care. Quality improvement
interventions with focused systems of care are needed to optimize
patient outcomes,” commented Dr. Pokorney.
Dr. Pokorney’s presentation at ACC.23/WCC highlighted the
cumulative incidence of all-cause hospitalization and the
associated healthcare expenditure for these patients during a
period of one year after infection diagnosis. Complete device
extraction within six days of CIED infection diagnosis was
associated with lower all-cause hospitalization in follow-up (21%
lower) and lower healthcare expenditure (42% lower) compared with
patients who did not undergo extraction [5]. Timely extraction was
also associated with lower hospitalization rates. The patient group
for which no device extraction within 30 days of diagnosis took
place was characterized by a 68% hospitalization rate compared to a
54% hospitalization rate for the group in which patients underwent
CEID extraction within six days of diagnosis. Additionally,
hospital expenditures in the year following a CIED infection were
almost cut in half, with costs being USD 63,259 for the group with
no extraction within 30 days, reducing to USD 36,815 for extraction
within six days.
Dr. John Andriulli added: “CIED infection is a healthcare crisis
and EMR (electronic medical records) are essential in identifying
patients and minimizing time to extraction. It must be
ubiquitously shared between hospital systems to improve length of
stay and more importantly to impact the potential reduction in
mortality. This is especially true for outside hospital transfers.
This is when the EMR becomes even more important.”
Performance and safety of 3D intracardiac
echocardiographyThe prospective, non-randomized,
multi-center, observational study*** into the safety and
performance of Philips 3D Intracardiac Echocardiography Catheter
(ICE) – VeriSight Pro – was led by Dr. Mohamad Alkhouli at Mayo
Clinic School of Medicine. The study was based on a cohort of 155
patients evaluated for a range of percutaneous cardiac intervention
procedures, including left atrial appendage occlusion (LAAO),
cardiac ablation, heart valve replacement, and patent foramen ovale
(PFO) as well as atrial septal defect (ASD) ‘hole-in-the-heart’
repair procedures.
Compared to TEE, which involves passing an ultrasound transducer
deep into the patient’s esophagus, an ICE catheter has a
tip-mounted ultrasound transducer that can be routed to the heart
via the patient’s blood vessels and a small incision in the skin.
For the majority of patients, ICE is considerably more comfortable
than TEE and requires less sedation or anesthesia, improving
patient safety and experience and reducing the number of operating
room staff required during a procedure.
During the study, patients were followed until discharge or 48
hours after their procedure, with safety demonstrated by the fact
that no periprocedural device-related adverse events were reported.
Philips VeriSight Pro 3D ICE demonstrated acceptable or better
image quality compared to TEE or competitive ICE technology in over
95% of the procedures. VeriSight Pro 3D ICE was considered to be an
acceptable or better surrogate to TEE 89.7% of the time.
All three clinical studies are part of more than 110 ongoing
clinical studies that support Philips image-guided therapy
solutions with clinical evidence. For ten consecutive years,
Philips has been recognized as a top innovator in the Clarivate Top
100 Global Innovator list.
For more information on innovation at Philips, click here.
*Supported by a research grant from Philips. Philips had no role
in the design of the study or conduct of the analysis.**In the
Secemsky study, the Hazard Ratio of 0.96 implies that patients
undergoing PCI using angiography and IVI imaging during PCI have a
4% lower risk of dying during the following year than patients
undergoing PCI using angiography alone.***Philips sponsored and
developed the Philips Intracardiac Echocardiograhy (ICE) Clinical
Registry, NCT 04950192
[1] Truesdell A, Alasnag M, Kaul P, et al. Intravascular Imaging
During Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2023
Feb, 81 (6) 590–605.[2] Pokorney SD. Low Rates Of Guideline
Directed Care Associated With Higher Mortality In Patients With
Infections Of Pacemakers And Implantable Cardioverter
Defibrillators. American College of Cardiology (ACC) Late Breaking
Clinical Trials. Washington, DC, USA April 2022 [presentation].[3]
Kusumoto et al. 2017 HRS Expert Consensus Statement on
Cardiovascular Implantable Electronic Device Lead Management and
Extraction. Heart Rhythm, 2017.[4] Blomström-Lundqvist, C., et al.
(2020, Jun 1). European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA)
international consensus document on how to prevent, diagnose, and
treat cardiac implantable electronic device infections -endorsed by
HRS, APHRS, LAHRS, ISCVID, ESCMID in collaboration with EACTS. Eur
Heart J, 41(21), 2012-2032.[5] Pokorney SD. Healthcare utilization
and healthcare expenditures in patients with infections of
pacemaker and implantable cardioverter defibrillators. American
College of Cardiology (ACC) Scientific Sessions. New Orleans, USA
March 2023 [presentation].
For further information, please contact:Joost
Maltha Philips Global Press Office Tel:
+31 6 10 55
8116 Email: joost.maltha@philips.com
About Royal Philips
Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA) is a leading health
technology company focused on improving people's health and
well-being through meaningful innovation. Philips’ patient- and
people-centric innovation leverages advanced technology and deep
clinical and consumer insights to deliver personal health solutions
for consumers and professional health solutions for healthcare
providers and their patients in the hospital and the home.
Headquartered in the Netherlands, the company is a leader in
diagnostic imaging, ultrasound, image-guided therapy, monitoring
and enterprise informatics, as well as in personal health. Philips
generated 2022 sales of EUR 17.8 billion and employs approximately
77,000 employees with sales and services in more than 100
countries. News about Philips can be found at
www.philips.com/newscenter.
- Philips Intracardiac Echocardiography Catheter – VeriSight
Pro
- Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) catheter
- CIED infection
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