CytoSorbents Corporation (NASDAQ: CTSO), a leader in the treatment
of life-threatening conditions in the intensive care unit and
cardiac surgery using blood purification, today announced the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has accepted its De Novo medical
device application for DrugSorb™-ATR and initiated substantive
review. The goal of DrugSorb-ATR, an investigational medical
device, is to reduce the severity of perioperative bleeding in
patients on ticagrelor (Brilinta®, AstraZeneca) undergoing coronary
artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery.
The FDA De Novo pathway provides a regulatory
process for novel medical devices that are found to be low to
moderate risk and lack an appropriate predicate device. Acceptance
of the company’s De Novo application follows FDA’s previous
granting of Breakthrough Device Designation to DrugSorb-ATR, making
it eligible for priority review. The Company anticipates an FDA
decision in 2025.
Dr. Phillip Chan, Chief Executive Officer of
CytoSorbents, stated, “We are pleased to achieve this important
milestone and to enter the substantive review phase with FDA of our
De Novo application. We believe DrugSorb-ATR represents a
breakthrough solution that will allow patients to proceed with
their much-needed CABG surgery in a safe and timely manner rather
than risking serious, potentially life-threatening complications
and consuming costly hospital resources while waiting in the
hospital for multiple days for ticagrelor to be naturally
eliminated from their system. We are committed to working closely
with FDA throughout the review process.”
Ticagrelor is a blood thinning drug frequently
administered in the hospital to patients suffering a heart attack.
If patients are not eligible for a coronary stent, they will often
require CABG surgery to restore blood flow to heart muscle. Current
guidelines recommend the delay of surgery by three to five days to
allow “washout” or natural elimination of the drug to reduce the
high risk of serious and potentially fatal perioperative bleeding
from the use of the blood thinner. The 140-patient North American
pivotal STAR-T randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled trial
evaluated the safety and efficacy of DrugSorb-ATR in patients
undergoing urgent cardiac surgery on ticagrelor to reduce the
severity of perioperative bleeding complications compared with
patients operated without the device. These safety and efficacy
data in CABG patients from STAR-T form the basis of our marketing
approval submission.
CytoSorbents also expects to submit DrugSorb-ATR
for Health Canada Medical Device Licensure soon for this same
purpose, pending the expected receipt of MDSAP certification.
About the U.S. and Canadian Regulatory
Pathways
The U.S. FDA De Novo process for medical devices
provides a marketing pathway to classify novel medical devices for
which special controls are established to provide reasonable
assurance of safety and effectiveness but for which there is no
legally marketed predicate device. Following application acceptance
by FDA, De Novo submissions enter the substantive review phase
where the FDA Breakthrough Device designation and an associated
interactive priority review, can accelerate the process.
The Health Canada Medical Device License (MDL)
authorizes manufacturers to import or sell Class II, III, and IV
medical devices in Canada. The license ensures that these devices
meet the necessary safety, quality, and efficacy standards as per
the Medical Devices Regulations. MDL requires MDSAP certification,
which the Company expects to receive shortly, at which point it
will file its MDL application.
Final regulatory decisions on DrugSorb-ATR are
expected from FDA and Health Canada in 2025. DrugSorb-ATR is not
yet granted or approved in the U.S. or Canada, respectively.
About CytoSorbents Corporation (NASDAQ:
CTSO)
CytoSorbents Corporation is a leader in the
treatment of life-threatening conditions in the intensive care unit
and cardiac surgery through blood purification. CytoSorbents’
proprietary blood purification technologies are based on
biocompatible, highly porous polymer beads that can actively remove
toxic substances from blood and other bodily fluids by pore capture
and surface adsorption. Cartridges filled with these beads can be
used with standard blood pumps already in the hospital (e.g.
dialysis, ECMO, heart-lung machines). CytoSorbents’ technologies
are used in a number of broad applications. Two important ones are
1) the removal of blood thinners during and after cardiothoracic
surgery to reduce the risk of severe bleeding and 2) the removal of
inflammatory agents in common critical illnesses such as sepsis,
burn injury, trauma, lung injury, liver failure, cytokine release
syndrome, and pancreatitis that can lead to massive inflammation,
organ failure and patient death. In these diseases, the risk of
death can be extremely high, and there are few, if any, effective
treatments.
CytoSorbents’ lead product, CytoSorb®, is
approved in the European Union and distributed in 76
countries worldwide, with more than 250,000 devices used
cumulatively to date. CytoSorb was originally launched in
the European Union under CE mark as the first cytokine
adsorber. Additional CE mark extensions were granted for bilirubin
and myoglobin removal in clinical conditions such as liver disease
and trauma, respectively, and
for ticagrelor and rivaroxaban removal in
cardiothoracic surgery procedures. CytoSorb has also
received FDA Emergency Use Authorization in the
United States for use in adult critically ill COVID-19
patients with impending or confirmed respiratory failure, to reduce
pro-inflammatory cytokine levels. CytoSorb is not yet approved
in the United States.
In the U.S. and Canada, CytoSorbents is
developing the DrugSorb™-ATR antithrombotic removal system, an
investigational device based on an equivalent polymer technology to
CytoSorb, to reduce the severity of perioperative bleeding in
high-risk surgery due to blood thinning drugs. It has received
two FDA Breakthrough Device Designations: one for the removal
of ticagrelor and another for the removal of
the direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC) apixaban and
rivaroxaban in a cardiopulmonary bypass circuit during urgent
cardiothoracic procedures. In September 2024, the Company submitted
a De Novo medical device application to the U.S. FDA requesting
marketing approval to reduce the severity of perioperative bleeding
in CABG patients on the antithrombotic drug ticagrelor, which was
accepted for substantive review in October 2024. The Company
expects to submit its completed Health Canada Medical Device
License (MDL) application, pending the expected receipt of Medical
Device Single Audit Program (MDSAP) certification in the near
future. DrugSorb-ATR is not yet granted or approved in the United
States and Canada, respectively.
The Company has numerous marketed products and
products under development based upon this unique blood
purification technology protected by many issued U.S. and
international patents and registered trademarks, and multiple
patent applications pending, including ECOS-300CY®, CytoSorb-XL™,
HemoDefend-RBC™, HemoDefend-BGA™, VetResQ®, K+ontrol™, DrugSorb™,
ContrastSorb, and others. For more information, please visit the
Company’s website at www.cytosorbents.com or follow us
on Facebook and X.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release includes forward-looking
statements intended to qualify for the safe harbor from liability
established by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited
to, statements about our plans, objectives, future targets and
outlooks for our business, representations and contentions, and the
outcome of our regulatory submissions, and are not historical facts
and typically are identified by use of terms such as “may,”
“should,” “could,” “expect,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “believe,”
“estimate,” “predict,” “potential,” “continue” and similar words,
although some forward-looking statements are expressed differently.
You should be aware that the forward-looking statements in this
press release represent management’s current judgment and
expectations, but our actual results, events and performance could
differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements.
Factors which could cause or contribute to such differences
include, but are not limited to, the risks discussed in our Annual
Report on Form 10-K, filed with the SEC on March 14, 2024, as
updated by the risks reported in our Quarterly Reports on Form
10-Q, and in the press releases and other communications to
shareholders issued by us from time to time which attempt to advise
interested parties of the risks and factors which may affect our
business. We caution you not to place undue reliance upon any such
forward-looking statements. We undertake no obligation to publicly
update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a
result of new information, future events, or otherwise, other than
as required under the Federal securities laws.
U.S. Company Contact:Peter J. Mariani, Chief
Financial Officer305 College Road EastPrinceton, NJ
08540pmariani@cytosorbents.com
Investor Relations Contact:Aman Patel, CFA
ICR-Westwicke ir@cytosorbents.com
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