Other Body1 KnowCo's: Empower your Life™
Back1 Body1 Dental1 Diabetes1 Fibroids1 Knee1 MedTech1 Reflux1 Shoulder1 Uterus1 Veins1 Wounds1
Body1
 Register
 Login
 Main Page
 Heart News
Feature Story
 Education Center
Conditions
Procedures
Diagnostics
 Heart Attack Center
Prevention
Survivors
Dr. Reginald “Reggie” Washington  Heart
 Hero™

Dr. Reginald “Reggie” Washington:
Disease Prevention through Weight Management.
About Heroes
 Join the Discussion  in  Our Forums
 Community
Heart1 Forums
Patient Stories
 Reference
Online Resources
Video Library
advertisement
advertisement
Search the Body1 Network
   
December 01, 2008  
HEART NEWS: Feature Story

  • Print this Article
  • Email this Article
  • Links/Reprints
  • New Drug-Coated Stents Exceeds Supply

    New Drug-Coated Stents Exceed Supply


    June 28, 2003

    TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Demand for Johnson & Johnson's new drug-coated stents has greatly eclipsed supply in the two months they've been on the U.S. market, boosted by pent-up demand from surgeries postponed until the devices gained regulatory approval.

    The drug coating on the stents reduces chances a heart artery will reclog after being cleared out and propped open with the tiny metal scaffolds.

    A report of two deaths in patients who received the stent briefly shook the company's stock Friday. The Food and Drug Administration is looking into the deaths at St. Francis Hospital in Roslyn, N.Y., in two patients who they developed blood clots around Cypher stents, said spokeswoman Kathleen Quinn.

    The hospital said incidence of clot formation in the 264 patients it has given Cypher stents appears similar to the rate with bare metal stents. Hospital spokesman Andy Kraus would give no further information.

    Sam Liang, vice president of the global stent business at Johnson & Johnson's Cordis Corp. unit in Miami Lakes, Fla., said the patients were elderly and extremely sick, and the problem was not with the stent.

    The news pushed J&J stock down as much as 3 percent on the New York Stock Exchange, but it recovered to close at $51.54, down about 1.5 percent.

    For now, Cordis has the drug-coated stent market to itself, said Dan Lemaitre, medical technology analyst at Merrill Lynch, who recommended investors buy the stock on the dip.

    Hospitals have been complaining about a shortage of Cypher stents, which slowly release medicine to prevent scarring around the stent from reclogging an artery cleared out by angioplasty - a condition called restenosis. Roughly 15 percent of patients with bare metal stents must undergo another artery-clearing procedure within a year; with Cypher, the rate is about 4 percent, according to Cordis, the stent-making unit of New Brunswick, N.J.-based Johnson & Johnson.

    "I have a hunch in the long run that's all we're going to be using," American Heart Association spokesman Dr. Donald LaVan, a cardiologist at University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, said of the drug-coated stent.

    Fueled by patient demand, doctors' enthusiasm and use in sicker patients than expected, Cordis' share of the U.S. stent market jumped from 30 percent to more than 60 percent within five weeks of Cypher's April 24 approval, Liang said. Cordis has increased manufacturing capacity about 50 percent, he added.

    Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick already has 35 people on a waiting list.

    "People who can't wait are having a bare stent put in and others whose condition is stable enough to wait can have a Cypher stent reserved for them," said hospital spokesman John Patella.

    But Cypher isn't right for every patient, said Dr. Spencer King, director of interventional cardiology at Piedmont Hospital and a professor of medicine at Emory University in Atlanta. He said unless patients have diabetes, narrow arteries or a long clogged stretch, bare metal stents are generally fine.

    "Restenosis, as far as we know, doesn't alter your survival," Kings said, but many physicians feel they should use a Cypher so patients won't think the hospital was trying to save money.

    Cypher stents retail for $3,195, compared to about $1,000 for bare metal ones, and while Medicare is paying nearly all of the cost, hospitals are losing some money on Cyphers, doctors say.

    ---

    On the Net: http://www.jnj.com


    Last updated: 28-Jun-03

    Comments

  • Add Comment
  •    
    Interact on Heart1

    Discuss this topic with others.
     
    Feature Archives

    Screening For Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

    Preventive Antibiotics Not Necessary For Most Dental-related Heart Problems

    The Silent Destroyer: Part Two

    High Blood Pressure: The Silent Destroyer

    Healthy Hearts: Keeping The Beat

    Previous 5 Features ...

    Next 5 Features ...

    More Features ...
       
     
    Related Multimedia

    The risk of cardiac death due to a lower ejection fraction

    The function of a defibrillator

    Plags/fatty deposits as a cause for a heart attack

    More Features ...
     
    Related Content
    Clots Prompt Warning to Properly Use New Stents

    FDA OKs Stent to Improve Heart Treatment

    New Heart Stent Promises to Be Effective But Costly Treatment

    Heart Technique Reportedly Lessens Pain

    Court Upholds Denial of Stent Injunction

    More Features ...
     
    Home About Us Press Jobs Advertise With Us Contact Us
    advertisement
    ©1999- 2008 Body1, Inc. All rights reserved.
    Disclaimer: The information provided within this website is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for consultation with your physician or healthcare provider. The opinions expressed herein are not necessarily those of the Owners and Sponsors of this site. By using this site you agree to indemnify, and hold the Owners and Sponsors harmless, from any disputes arising from content posted here-in.
    See our Terms of Service, our Privacy Policy, our Advertising Policy and our Editorial Policy.