International Coronary Trial Underway in United States and Japan
Study to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of New Coronary Micro Crown
ST. PAUL, Minn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 1, 2014--
Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. (CSI) (NASDAQ: CSII), announced that it has
completed enrollment in Japan for its Coronary Orbital Atherectomy
System Trial (COAST) study. Taking place in both Japan and the United
States, the study is designed to assess the safety and efficacy, as well
as economic outcomes, of CSI’s new investigational micro crown Orbital
Atherectomy System (OAS) in treating severely calcified coronary lesions
in patients suffering from Coronary Artery Disease (CAD).
COAST requires a minimum of 50 patients in the U.S. at up to 15 sites
and a minimum of 25 patients across 5 sites in Japan for a total of 100
patients to be enrolled. CSI surpassed its required number of
enrollments in Japan with a total of 26 patients on November 20, 2014.
Enrollment in the United States is expected to be completed in 2015.
The 1.25 mm micro crown is CSI’s second-generation system designed to
facilitate stent delivery in patients with severely calcified lesions
who are acceptable candidates for percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty (PTCA) or stenting. The micro crown OAS is designed to
improve the tracking and piloting of the OAS driveshaft and the ability
of the crown to reach the lesion while operating at lower rotational
speeds.
“Completing international enrollment is a key milestone in our path to
expanding successful OAS treatment of patients with severe CAD,” said
David L. Martin
, CSI president and chief executive officer. “Data from
this study is expected to help secure approval for the use of the new
micro crown OAS in CAD patients in the world’s two largest coronary
markets.”
COAST builds on CSI’s ORBIT II study, the first trial designed to study
patients with severely calcified lesions who are typically excluded from
all major trials but commonly seen in the real world. It is a
prospective, single-arm, multi-center, global, investigational study.
The 26 subjects were enrolled at five sites in Japan. The study’s
principal investigators are Dr.
Shigeru Saito
, Director of Cardiology
and Catheterization Laboratories at Shonan Kamakura General Hospital,
Kamakura, Japan and Dr.
Gregg Stone
, Director of the Cardiovascular
Research and Education Center for Interventional Vascular Therapy at
Columbia University Medical Center, New York.
Said Saito, “I’ve used CSI’s new micro crown OAS to successfully modify
severely calcified coronary lesions in several patients. This technology
allowed for successful stent delivery and expansion in very challenging
patient cases.”
About Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)
CAD is a life-threatening condition and leading cause of death in men
and women in the United States. CAD occurs when a fatty material called
plaque builds up on the walls of arteries that supply blood to the
heart. The plaque buildup causes the arteries to harden and narrow
(atherosclerosis), reducing blood flow. The risk of CAD increases if a
person has one or more of the following: high blood pressure, abnormal
cholesterol levels, diabetes, or family history of early heart disease.
According to the American Heart Association, 16.3 million people in the
United States have been diagnosed with CAD, the most common form of
heart disease. Heart disease claims more than 600,000 lives in the
United States each year. According to estimates, significant arterial
calcium is present in nearly 40 percent of patients undergoing a
percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Significant calcium
contributes to poor outcomes and higher treatment costs in coronary
interventions when traditional therapies are used, including a
significantly higher occurrence of death and major adverse cardiac
events (MACE).
About Cardiovascular Systems, Inc.
Cardiovascular Systems, Inc., based in St. Paul, Minn., is a medical
device company focused on developing and commercializing innovative
solutions for treating vascular and coronary disease. The company’s
Orbital Atherectomy Systems treat calcified and fibrotic plaque in
arterial vessels throughout the leg and heart in a few minutes of
treatment time, and address many of the limitations associated with
existing surgical, catheter and pharmacological treatment alternatives.
The U.S. FDA granted 510(k) clearance for the use of the Diamondback
Orbital Atherectomy System in peripheral arteries in August 2007. In
October 2013, the company received FDA approval for the use of the
Diamondback Orbital Atherectomy System in coronary arteries. To date,
nearly 170,000 of CSI’s devices have been sold to leading institutions
across the United States. For more information, visit the company’s
website at www.csi360.com.
Safe Harbor
Certain statements in this news release are forward-looking statements
within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995 and are provided under the protection of the safe harbor for
forward-looking statements provided by that Act. For example, statements
in this press release regarding (i) the COAST trial; (ii) international
expansion; and (iii) approval of the micro crown OAS in the United
States and Japan, are forward-looking statements. These statements
involve risks and uncertainties which could cause results to differ
materially from those projected, including but not limited to the
effectiveness of the micro crown OAS; actual clinical trial and study
results; government clearances and approvals; and other factors detailed
from time to time in CSI’s SEC reports, including its most recent annual
report on Form 10-K and subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. CSI
encourages you to consider all of these risks, uncertainties and other
factors carefully in evaluating the forward-looking statements contained
in this release. As a result of these matters, changes in facts,
assumptions not being realized or other circumstances, CSI's actual
results may differ materially from the expected results discussed in the
forward-looking statements contained in this release. The
forward-looking statements made in this release are made only as of the
date of this release, and CSI undertakes no obligation to update them to
reflect subsequent events or circumstances.
Coronary Micro Crown OAS
CSI has commenced its COAST Investigational Device Exemption clinical
trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of its new micro crown
orbital technology in treating coronary arteries. This new system is
limited by federal law to investigational use and is currently not
commercially available in the United States or Japan.

Source: Cardiovascular Systems, Inc.
Cardiovascular Systems, Inc.
Jack Nielsen, 651-202-4919
j.nielsen@csi360.com
or
PadillaCRT
Matt
Sullivan, 612-455-1709
matt.sullivan@padillacrt.com