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Saturday, August 31, 2019

Dorian update — Carnival Corp

Weather Update – August 31, 2019 | 12:00  PM (ET)
Our Fleet Operations Center in Miami is actively monitoring Hurricane Dorian’s potential impact on the departures listed below. Given that storms can be so uncertain, this information reflects our plan for these sailings based on the current forecast.
As the safety of our guests and crew is our number one priority, we will continue to keep an eye on the storm and factor in guidance from the National Hurricane Center, U.S. Coast Guard and the local port authorities to provide timely updates as more information becomes available.
The following homeports and ships remain under watch:
CHARLESTON
Carnival Sunshine 09/02/19 – No change to itinerary, we plan to operate as scheduled. Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL3 to CRUISE (278473).
FORT LAUDERDALE (PORT EVERGLADES)
Carnival Magic 08/31/19 – No change to itinerary; we plan to operate as scheduled. Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL9 to CRUISE (278473).
JACKSONVILLE
Carnival Ecstasy 08/31/19 – No change to itinerary; we plan to operate as scheduled.
Carnival Ecstasy 09/05/19 – Still evaluating.  Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL12 to CRUISE (278473).
There is a possibility Carnival Ecstasy will not be able to return to Jacksonville on Thursday.  If the port is closed, the ship will be in position to dock as soon as the authorities have reopened the port.
PORT CANAVERAL
Port Canaveral is expected to be closed on Sunday through the middle of next week.  We are optimistic the port will reopen by Thursday.
Carnival Breeze 08/31/19 – No change to itinerary; we plan to operate as scheduled. Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL10 to CRUISE (278473). 
Carnival Liberty 09/02/19 – This cruise is cancelled.  Guests will receive a full refund of their cruise fare and any pre-purchased items.  More details to follow in our email.
Carnival Elation 09/02/19 – This cruise will now operate as a 2 day sailing, departing September 5th and returning September 7th with a visit to Nassau.  Guests who sail will receive a pro-rated refund of their cruise fare and any pre-purchased beverage and Wi-Fi packages. Guests who wish to cancel will receive a future cruise credit for the full amount of their cruise fare.  An email with additional details will follow.
PORTMIAMI
Carnival Conquest – 08/31/19 – No change to itinerary; we plan to operate as scheduled. Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL8 to CRUISE (278473).
Carnival Sensation 08/31/19 – We will now visit Grand Turk on 9/2, Half Moon Cay on 9/3 and Nassau on 9/4. Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL7 to CRUISE (278473).
Carnival Victory 9/02/19 – This cruise will now operate as a 2 day cruise departing Wednesday, 9/4 with one port of call, to be determined. Guests who sail will receive a pro-rated refund of their cruise fare and any pre-purchased beverage and Wi-Fi packages. Guests who wish to cancel will receive a future cruise credit for the full amount of their cruise fare.  An email with additional details will follow.
Carnival Horizon 09/01/19 – The ship will be docking this evening to give guests the opportunity to disembark in anticipation of a port closure on Sunday.  Although officials are requiring the ship to depart tonight, we are seeking approval to remain docked so we can operate tomorrow’s embarkation.  This decision is expected at 5:30 PM today. Embarking guests will not be able to board the ship Saturday evening.  Please refer to our email for more information.  Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL5 to CRUISE (278473).
TAMPA
Carnival Paradise 08/31/19 – Please disregard your arrival appointment and make plans to arrive at the cruise terminal between 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM.  All guests must be on board by 1:30 PM. We will sail shortly after on our scheduled itinerary. Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL11 to CRUISE (278473).
Carnival Miracle 09/01/19 –This sailing will now operate as an 8-day sailing, departing on Saturday evening.  Kindly disregard your arrival appointments and make plans to arrive at the cruise terminal between 7:00 PM – 10:00 PM.  We will sail shortly after on our scheduled itinerary.  Guests who cannot travel on the extended duration, may cancel and receive a future cruise credit. Please contact
1-800-CARNIVAL to let us know if you are not traveling.  Please sign up for text alerts by texting CCL4 to CRUISE (278473).
Pre-purchased Carnival shore excursions for cancelled ports will be automatically refunded to your onboard Sail & Sign® account.
We sincerely apologize for the disruption caused by Hurricane Dorian.  We thank our guests for their patience and understanding while we navigate through the uncertainty the storm is causing.
We will post another update by 2:00 PM (ET) Saturday.
DEPARTED VOYAGES
Carnival Liberty 08/30/10 – This cruise will return on Thursday, 9/5.  In addition to Nassau, we have added visits to Costa Maya and Cozumel.
Carnival Victory 8/30/19 – This cruise will return on Wednesday, 9/4.  In addition to Key West, we have added a visit to Progreso on Monday.

Pharmacogenetic test makers cheer UnitedHealth coverage; other payers balk

UnitedHealthcare’s decision this month to cover genetic tests designed to predict a patient’s response to mental health medications has injected a dose of optimism for the companies that sell them, coming after the FDA issued a broad warning about unapproved claims made by some tests.
The insurance giant’s policy on pharmacogenetic testing will, starting in October, open up United’s 27 million individual and group clients to companies including Myriad Genetics and Genomind, which sell tests measuring a patient’s compatibility​ with antidepressant and antipsychotic drugs.
Executives at both companies predict the decision will bring in other payers that are, for now, on the sidelines.
By covering genetic tests for antidepressants, UnitedHealth is betting on a technology that the FDA suggests is still backed by shaky evidence.
A 2018 FDA notice asked individual companies to stop claiming their tests can predict which drugs a patient will respond to. In April, it threatened regulatory action against one, Inova Genetics Laboratory, hitting it with a warning letter.
“The relationship between DNA variations and the effectiveness of antidepressant medication has never been established,” the FDA said in a notice updated in April.
In its rationale for covering the tests, UnitedHealth cited trials, including one sponsored by Myriad, that showed patients had better treatment responses and remission rates when their treatment was guided by genetic tests. But crucially, the symptoms of those patients did not improve any more than a control group who received treatment as usual.
“I wouldn’t say there’s no evidence it works,” said James Potash, director of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University who said he is not affiliated with either test maker. “It’s just the evidence at this point is still weak.”
“I’ve been concerned that the hype around pharmacogenetics, at least for depression, has gotten out ahead of the data,” Potash said.
Anthem, which provides coverage to nearly 24 million individuals and employers, says tests are “investigational and not medically necessary,” according to a company spokesperson.
The Blue Cross Blue Shield Federal Employee Program, which covers two-thirds of government workers and their families, says there isn’t enough proof the genetic tests actually improve patient health.
Medicare does not have a national coverage determination for pharmacogenetic testing for psychotropics. A CMS spokesperson told MedTech Dive regional administrators can make exceptions for individual cases. The agency would not comment on whether Medicare or Medicaid has plans to make determinations in the future.
Myriad’s GeneSight test has an average selling price of $2,000. Genomind’s test was listed at $1,886 in a 2016 contract allowing federal agencies to order it.
Still, test makers say the decision by the nation’s largest private carrier gives them a chance to show the tests have value.
UnitedHealth is typically one of the last insurers to cover new products, Shawn Patrick O’Brien, CEO of Genomind, told MedTech Dive, predicting its rivals will follow suit.
“We expect this to be a tipping point for other major payers,” he said, “because they don’t want to be uncompetitive in the marketplace.” Genomind has discussed coverage with Anthem, Blue Cross and Blue Shield and at least one other payer, he said.
Myriad, which is also courting Anthem, is pursuing more business with pharmacy benefit managers and employers. In July it announced GeneSight would be a covered benefit by the PBM for Kroger, the nation’s largest grocer, and that an unnamed Fortune 50 employer would begin covering it in 2020.
Myriad CEO Mark Capone said on the company’s recent earnings call it is in “active dialogue” with Anthem, the biggest Blue Cross Blue Shield plan and second biggest private plan by revenue after UnitedHealthcare.
New contracts with payers could offset declining revenue from the test for Myriad. Revenue from GeneSight fell $12.3 million from the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, to June 30, 2019, according to SEC filings. Revenue from the test fell 15% in June alone.
Capone attributed the drop in sales to eliminating components of the test measuring patients’ compatibility with pain relievers and ADHD drugs. Those tests did not have as much evidence backing them up, he said, and “a few payers expressed similar views.”  “[W]e wanted to eliminate any potential hurdles” for coverage of the psychotropics test, Capone said.
Both Myriad and Genomind have said they are working with the FDA to make sure they comply.
In response to an FDA request, in August Myriad proposed changes to how it reports test results, even though “we continue to disagree the changes to the tests are required,” Capone said on the company’s fourth quarter earnings call. The company submitted clinical evidence for its test earlier in the year, he said.
Genomind has doubled its counseling staff to help doctors interpret test results instead of listing the genetic compatibility of drugs directly in the results.

Select Medical LTC hospitals sue HHS over dual-eligible bad debt

  • A group of specialty long-term care hospitals sued HHS in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia Tuesday, claiming the government’s failure to reimburse them for Medicaid patients’ bad debts is arbitrary and capricious and violates the Administrative Procedure Act.
  • The hospitals want the court to reverse the Provider Reimbursement Review Board’s decision denying reimbursement for unpaid Medicare cost-sharing amounts (known as bad debts) relating to fiscal year 2011. They want the court to require HHS to reimburse them in the amount of $997,143, and also award them interest, fees and other costs.
  • Among other claims, the hospitals say CMS abruptly changed its policy in reimbursing the hospitals for dual eligible bad debts without going through the required notice and comment rulemaking.

At the heart of the long-term care hospitals’ complaint is they weren’t able to bill and receive remittance advices because they didn’t participate in their respective state Medicaid programs. RAs are documents summarizing payment or denial of payment from the applicable states when the hospitals provided services to patients eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.
In 2007, CMS’ fiscal intermediaries (now called Medicare Administrative Contractors) started to deny all dual eligible bad debts submitted without Medicaid RAs, a document the LTCHs were unable to obtain because they didn’t participate in Medicaid. They also required the LTCHs to bill Medicaid in order to confirm the states will not pay the Medicare cost-sharing amounts on behalf of the dual eligible policy beneficiary (known as CMS’ “must bill” policy).
The LTCHs, primarily subsidiaries of Select Medical in various states, call the situation a “classic Catch-22.” That’s because the state Medicaid programs will not issue RAs — which CMS requires to reimburse the bad debts—  in a form that CMS will accept and the Medicare providers either are not enrolled in Medicaid or in some states are ineligible to enroll in Medicaid. That’s because LTCHS aren’t considered a recognized Medicaid provider type in those states.
This isn’t the first time the LTCHs have sued HHS over dual eligible payments. Many of the same plaintiff LTCHs sued HHS in 2010 to get reimbursed for their Medicare cost reporting periods between fiscal years 2005-2010. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia struck down the agency’s decisions, finding CMS was required to conduct notice-and-comment rulemaking before making the plaintiffs as non-Medicaid participating providers subject to the must-bill requirement and the RA requirement.

Amyloid’s last hope? Prevention studies next big test for Alzheimer’s research

A study set to read out early next year could be the final curtain for an Alzheimer’s disease hypothesis that has prevailed for more than 20 years — or it could spur a re-evaluation of why past efforts failed.
Efforts to reverse the devastating neurodegenerative disorder in symptomatic patients by targeting amyloid beta lesions in the brain have come up empty time and time again. The DIAN-TU study and a number of parallel trials, however, are seeking to prevent Alzheimer’s from developing in the first place among patients genetically predisposed to the condition.
Many call these long-shot studies. But the rationale is that early intervention in patients with a high probability of developing amyloid-driven cognitive impairment will delay disease onset and help lessen symptoms, with possible lessons for physicians eager to prevent Alzheimer’s in the broader population.
“If this trial is successful, if it really shows that intervening in amyloid alone prior to symptom onset has a clear effect on slowing disease progression in this population, then I think most in this field would agree that it’s likely that this would translate to the larger population in a similar state of the disease,” said Eric McDade, the DIAN-TU trial’s associate director and an associate neurology professor at Washington University in St. Louis.
As a sign of how difficult it will be for DIAN-TU to tease out a positive benefit, three similar prevention trials have been terminated early in the past 15 months, albeit using experimental drugs with a different mechanism of action than those in DIAN-TU.

Aducanumab increases amyloid doubts

Much of the biopharma sector has already voted with its feet when it comes to the strategy of blocking amyloid to treat Alzheimer’s. Companies are now pursuing alternative hypotheses such as accumulation of another protein called tau, as Eli Lilly and Biogen are exploring, or a novel hypothesis that a bacterial infection is at the root of the disease.
This is the consequence of major setbacks in studies of symptomatic patients, most recently that of Biogen’s aducanumab. Widely viewed as the best amyloid-blocking antibody in the clinic, aducanumab’s pivotal ENGAGE and EMERGE trials were halted in March because data reviewers calculated the drug would not slow the disease’s progress in patients showing early symptoms. Failure at an interim analysis surprised much of the biopharma sector, which at least expected the trial to proceed to a final readout.
“There have been so many failures of amyloid it should be clear now to everyone it’s not going to succeed,” said Casey Lynch, CEO of Cortexyme, a company that is testing a competing hypothesis: that Alzheimer’s disease has its origins in infections by a bacteria called Porphyromonas gingivalis.
She points to data suggesting that beta amyloid is an immunological response. “It’s predictable that blocking it would be a bad idea” if the bacterial hypothesis is true, she said.
“There have been so many failures of amyloid, it should be clear now to everyone it’s not going to succeed.”
Casey Lynch
CEO, Cortexyme

McDade and the DIAN-TU researchers are following an approach which holds that by the time patients start exhibiting symptoms the amyloid beta deposits have already caused too much damage to reverse or slow Alzheimer’s. In the preventive setting, researchers have sought to enroll patients with several mutations known to be associated with frequent disease onset.
For example, DIAN-TU, which is being coordinated by Washington University in St. Louis, enrolled patients with uncommon mutations that are responsible for seven out of 10 cases of early onset disease, a design that may be more likely to detect a benefit than broad trials of patients with unknown causes of disease.
Prevention trials still underway
TRIALINSTITUTIONDRUGSPOPULATION
A4University of Southern CaliforniaSolanezumab1,150 patients with evidence of amyloid brain pathology
API-ADADBanner Alzheimer’s InstituteCrenezumab252 patients with PSEN1 E280A mutation
DIAN-TUWashington University in St. LouisSolanezumab, gantenerumab490 patients with PSEN1, PSEN2 or APP mutations
SOURCE: Clinicaltrials.gov
The first results from this trial are expected to emerge in early 2020, in patients treated with Eli Lilly’s solanezumab and Roche’s gantenerumab. These agents are antibodies that bind with forms of amyloid beta and prevent them from accumulating in the brain. The last doses are expected to be administered in November.
As treatments for patients with symptomatic disease, solanezumab and gantenerumab both have failed, with the former showing no benefit in three separate pivotal trials and the latter missing in the Phase 3 SCARLET ROADtrial. Roche has another Phase 3 trial underway in very early-stage patients.

Three failures

DIAN-TU differs from the preventive trials that have failed in the past 15 months. All three of those studies tested another type of amyloid-targeting drug, called BACE inhibitors, and in different populations.
EARLY, which studied Johnson & Johnson’s atabecestat, was terminated early because of liver enzyme elevations that were described as “serious in nature.” It enrolled high-risk patients, defined by family history of dementia, signs of amyloid accumulation, or having an APOE4 mutation, which increases the risk of Alzheimer’s by twice as much or more.
Terminated prevention trials
TRIALSPONSORDRUGPOPULATIONREASON FOR TERMINATION
EarlyJohnson & Johnsonatabecestat90 patients with evidence of amyloid pathology (100 planned)Liver toxicity
Generation S1Banner Alzheimer’s Instituteumibecestat, CAD106481 patients homozygous for APOE4 (1,340 planned)Worsening cognitive function
Generation S2Banner Alzheimer’s Instituteumibecestat1,140 patients with APOE4 mutations, with heterozygotes needing to show signs of elevated brain amyloid (2,000 planned)Worsening cognitive function
Source: Clinicaltrials.gov

About 25% of people have one copy of APOE4, which doubles risk, and 2% have two copies, which raises the risk by three to five times.
The GENERATION trials run by the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute in Phoenix were the latest to fall short, failing at an interim review because of “worsening in some measures of cognitive function” in patients taking umibecestat, an experimental Amgen and Novartis drug. This trial also enrolled patients with one or two copies of APOE4, requiring evidence of amyloid accumulation in patients with one copy.
“What seems most likely to me is that there is some other off-target effect that is causing this unanticipated cognitive worsening,” said Pierre Tariot, co-principal investigator of the GENERATION trials and director of the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute, in an interview.
He noted BACE inhibitors target an enzyme with which dozens of molecules interact. The answer, therefore, may lie in further analysis of those chemical reactions.
This leaves just three major trials standing: DIAN-TU, the A4 trial of solanezumab in patients with evidence of amyloid brain pathology, and the API-ADAD trial of Roche’s crenezumab in patients with the same mutation as those in DIAN-TU.

FDA after?

Patients being enrolled into DIAN-TU have mutations in the PSEN1, PSEN2 or APP genes, which frequently lead to an early-onset form of Alzheimer’s.
If born into a family in which one of these mutations is present, the chances of inheriting the mutation is 50%, and nearly all carriers develop Alzheimer’s, according to a review article by DIAN-TU director Randall Bateman. However, this form of disease represents less than 1% of all Alzheimer’s patients.
If the data are positive, trial investigators might have a case to take to the Food and Drug Administration for approval in at least the populations tested in DIAN-TU. That would be a positive turnaround for Lilly, as the pharma largely de-emphasized work on solanezumab.
“We’ve had multiple conversations with the FDA along the way,” McDade said. “The goal of these trials has always been to get therapy to these families as quickly as possible.”
Tariot, an adviser to the Washington University group, believes there is likely to be some controversy about the data even if positive. That’s because of the relatively small patient numbers in each arm, a pooled placebo group and a dose increase that happened after patients had already been on therapy.
“The risk of non-informative results is so high.”
Pierre Tariot
Director, Banner Alzheimer’s Institute

With those factors potentially confounding results, positive or negative data could be less persuasive in either case, he says. “The risk of non-informative results is so high.”

What about non-genetic disease?

Translating any positive findings to the larger population with sporadic disease might be a big task. Oftentimes, patients don’t get diagnosed until cognitive impairments appear, which is what troubled so many previous Alzheimer’s trials.
Still, a success for DIAN-TU might spur interest in broader screening, such as in people who have had Alzheimer’s in their family histories.
“Even at the mildest stages there would be some motivation to diagnose the pathology underlying it,” said Matthew Barrett, clinical director of the memory and aging care clinic at the University of Virginia, who receives four new memory disorder referrals a week.
Indeed, Bateman, DIAN-TU’s director, has developed a biomarker test based on the ratio of amyloid beta peptide 42 to peptide 40, which correlates to accumulation of amyloid in the brain.
UVA’s Barrett, like many in the field, isn’t optimistic that DIAN-TU will succeed. But he sees the emergence of genetic and biomarker studies as a positive for the field, because it could eventually lead to precision treatments based on a focused biological hypothesis.
He makes the comparison to cancer, where much recent work has focused on genetic profiles and biomarkers. This allows drugmakers to focus on smaller groups of patients, and as drugs show their effectiveness, they have been successful at expanding into earlier lines of treatment and wider tumor and tissue types.
“That’s not been our approach in neurodegenerative disease,” Barrett said. “When you think of a genetic causal mutation, that’s such an easy group that’s pretty homogeneous that is easy to target. Treating earlier in disease to intervene as early as possible is a good idea.”
But he adds that the accuracy of such screening will be a challenge. “I’m concerned about our ability to really select high-risk populations that would progress without intervention.”
Screening, of course, would only be an issue if DIAN-TU or related trials succeed.
With the sector largely discounting the amyloid hypothesis, the bigger problem may be that alternative approaches are still at early development stages, potentially putting disease-modifying treatments years from reaching patients.

Delta adds 7,963 seats over weekend, no cancels planned ahead of Dorian arrival

  • Delta has not cancelled any flights as officials continue to determine potential impact of the slow-moving storm as it nears Florida over the next couple days. Travel waivers for the region remain in place through Sept. 4.
  • Ahead of Dorian’s arrival, the airline has sent supplies to airports in the area of possible impact.
  • The airline added 9,823 additional seats over the weekend in and out of the region for customers seeking to leave the area.
​Hurricane Dorian remains a Category 4 hurricane with max sustained winds of 155 mph and is forecast to trek up along the eastern side of Florida Tuesday morning, keeping about 80 miles off the coast. The latest from the National Hurricane Center no longer shows a direct hit to Florida, rather landfall is now expected up near the Carolinas sometime Thursday, Sept. 5.
Teams in Delta’s Operation and Customer Center in Atlanta continue to work with employees and airport teams across the southeast based on the latest weather model data and analysis from the airline’s Meteorology team. The airline has also sent additional employee support and supplies to stations along the coast, such as handheld check-in devices, generators, water and food in addition to reserving hotel rooms for employees if needed.
As a result of the forecast wind speeds and potential storm surges, two airports in Central Florida are working to determine if operations will cease overnight Sunday through Monday when Dorian nears the coastline. Delta has not taken any flights out of the schedule as Orlando and Daytona Beach officials continue to analyze the latest predictive track and impact of the storm.
Ahead of Hurricane Dorian’s arrival on the mainland, Delta increased the number of seats offered to those looking to leave the area of potential impact up to 7,963 seats between Saturday and Sunday, following the additional 1,860 seats offered Friday. The extra lift adds more flight options for customers departing cities along the Southeast coast from Brunswick, Ga. down across most of Florida.
Delta’s travel waivers remain in place for the Bahamas and cities along the Southeast Georgia coast and most of Florida. Delta capped fares, issued a temporary baggage and pet in cabin fee waiver and implemented restrictions on unaccompanied minor travel to and from cities in the potential path of the storm.
Customers are encouraged to check their flight status on Delta.com or the Fly Delta Mobile App. Customers can also get updates sent directly to their mobile device or by email with One-Time Flight Notification.

1 Florida county pushes back evacuation order

The Latest on Hurricane Dorian (all times local):
4:40 p.m.
A Florida county is delaying its evacuation order from Sunday to Monday as Hurricane Dorian slows its forward speed across the ocean and its projected path shifts further from the state’s Atlantic coast.
Brevard County is now calling for evacuations to begin Monday morning, instead of Sunday. County officials say families in mobile homes or flood-prone areas and those with special needs or on barrier islands including areas to the south of Kennedy Space Center need to seek shelter elsewhere.
Public Safety Director Matt Wallace cautions that people should remain vigilant. Says Wallace, “This is not your government saying we’re out of harm’s way. This is still a killer storm.”
Martin County, north of Palm Beach, also announced it would evacuate certain areas as Dorian nears the coast.
4:20 p.m.
The country’s two largest home improvement stores say they are gearing up for the storm and getting extra supplies to locations that could be impacted.
Lowe’s says it has shipped 1,500 truckloads of generators, flashlights and other supplies to stores in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. The company says it has more than 200 stores in those areas.
Home Depot also is shipping additional supplies to more than 150 stores in Florida and Georgia, and that number will likely be higher as the storm tracks north, the company says.
Hurricane Dorian, currently near the northwestern Bahamas, is expected to skirt the Southeast coastline near Florida and Georgia on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Both Lowe’s and Home Depot say that stores will stay open for as long as it is safe to do so.

Abiomed Impella® SmartAssist Platform Launches at Euro Cardiology Society

Abiomed announces today that the Impella CP® with SmartAssist technology, which is designed to improve patient outcomes with advanced algorithms and simplified patient management, will be commercially available in Europe beginning at the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Congress 2019 through a controlled roll out process at select sites. The majority of Impella CP heart pumps in Europe will be transitioned to SmartAssist over the next 12 months.
The new Impella CP heart pump features a fiber optic sensor, optimally positioned to measure the placement signal in the aorta, identify pump placement and enable repositioning without the use of imaging. (Graphic: Abiomed)
The new Impella CP heart pump features a fiber optic sensor, optimally positioned to measure the placement signal in the aorta, identify pump placement and enable repositioning without the use of imaging. (Graphic: Abiomed)
The new Impella CP heart pump features a fiber optic sensor, optimally positioned to measure the placement signal in the aorta, identify pump placement and enable repositioning without the use of imaging. The advanced sensors also enable the calculation and display of additional physiological data on the Automated Impella Controller. These advances to the Impella forward-flow heart pump technologies and software are designed to improve ease-of-use and patient management to improve both survival and heart recovery:
Weaning Algorithms to Optimize Survival and Native Heart Recovery:
  • Real-time displays of critical hemodynamic metrics indicative of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and cardiac power output (CPO). Impella CP with SmartAssist is the only mechanical circulatory support device that calculates and displays pressure signals indicative of LVEDP, MAP and CPO.
Easier Management and Repositioning:
  • SmartAssist sensor allows for precise positioning in the aorta and left ventricle and repositioning in the ICU without the need for catheterization lab or ultrasound imaging1.
Greater Hemodynamic Support:
  • Allows for sustained peak flows of up to 4.3L/minute (>85% of a normal cardiac cycle).
Faster, Simplified Impella Console Set Up:
  • Less than 90 seconds with fewer connections and reduced steps.