CARMAT Obtains Approval for the Reimbursement of Its Total Artificial Heart During the US Clinical Feasibility Study

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CARMAT (Paris:ALCAR), the designer and developer of the world’s most advanced total artificial heart, aiming to provide a therapeutic alternative for people suffering from end-stage biventricular heart failure, announces that the “Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services” (CMS) has approved coverage of the device and routine care items and services supplied to Medicare beneficiaries to be enrolled in the clinical feasibility study.

The approval confirms the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Category B designation of the device, which refers to a non-experimental/investigational device for which initial questions of safety and effectiveness have been resolved. It enables the company to accelerate its discussions with the purchase departments, research contract offices and institutional review boards (IRB) at the 7 sites selected for the study. As a reminder, CARMAT has already obtained the conditional approval of two IRB.

The study aims to include 10 transplant-eligible patients, and the primary endpoint corresponds to patient survival at 180 days after the implant or a successful heart transplant within 180 days of the implant.

Stéphane Piat, Chief Executive Officer of CARMAT, said: “This approval of CMS coverage marks a very important milestone for CARMAT, as it substantially supports its development in the United States. Indeed, hospitals will be able to receive payments for the device, routine care items and services during the clinical study. Given the ongoing discussions at the study centers, and subject to the positive evolution of the COVID-19 situation, we expect patient enrolment to begin in Q4 2020, as planned.”

About CARMAT: the world’s most advanced total artificial heart project

A credible response to end-stage heart failure: CARMAT aims to eventually provide a response to a major public health issue associated with heart disease, the world’s leading cause of death: chronic and acute heart failure. By pursuing the development of its total artificial heart, composed of the implantable bioprosthesis and its portable external power supply system to which it is connected, CARMAT intends to overcome the well-known shortfall in heart transplants for the tens of thousands of people suffering from irreversible end-stage heart failure, the most seriously affected of the 20 million patients with this progressive disease in Europe and the United States.

The result of combining two types of unique expertise: the medical expertise of Professor Carpentier, known throughout the world for inventing Carpentier-Edwards® heart valves, which are the most used in the world, and the technological expertise of Airbus Group, world aerospace leader.

The first physiological artificial heart: given its size, the use of highly biocompatible materials, its unique self-regulation system and its pulsatile nature, the CARMAT total artificial heart could, assuming the clinical trials are successful, potentially save the lives of thousands of patients each year with no risk of rejection and with a good quality of life.

Cardiology Magazine