Abbott’s in-Development Fully Implantable Heart Pump System Earns FDA’s Breakthrough Device Designation

Originally posted on Abbott.com

Abbott announced that the company has received Breakthrough Device designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for its in-development Fully Implantable Left Ventricular Assist System (FILVAS). The FDA launched the Breakthrough Devices Program in 2018 to help expedite the development and review of submissions for technology that offers significant advantages over existing approved products.

Approximately 6.2 million people in the U.S. are living with heart failure. Because this is a progressive disease, more than 600,000 people each year reach an advanced stage where traditional therapies, such as medication and cardiac resynchronization therapies, no longer work.

“As the leader in heart failure management, a fully implantable heart pump has been our vision for the tens of thousands of people who progress into advanced heart failure each year,” said Michael Pederson, senior vice president for Abbott’s electrophysiology and heart failure division. “The potential for a fully implantable system would mean more freedom and a greater quality of life because there are no external components to be carried everywhere. These advances underscore Abbott’s long-standing commitment to develop innovative devices that allow those with heart failure to live their best lives.”

Heart pumps are small, implantable mechanical devices that pump blood throughout the body in people living with advanced heart failure. Those living with a heart pump are either waiting for a heart transplant or are not candidates for a heart transplant, and need the life-saving device to pump blood from their heart to the rest of their body. Currently, left ventricular assist devices are implanted into the body and then powered using an external battery pack or charging port.

Abbott’s FILVAS is in research and development and is not available for sale anywhere in the world.

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