BIOTRONIK Begins BIOMAG-LL Pre-Market Trial to Evaluate Freesolve® Resorbable Magnesium Scaffold for Treatment of Long Lesions The New Study Sets the Stage for the Next-Gen Resorbable Magnesium Scaffold Market Expansion, Focusing on Its Safety and Efficacy for Long Lesions in Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
BIOTRONIK, a global leader in cardiovascular, endovascular, and neuromodulation solutions, today announces the launch of BIOMAG-LL, a pre-market trial focused on confirming the safety and clinical performance of Freesolve® Resorbable Magnesium Scaffold (RMS), for the treatment of long de novo lesions in native coronary arteries.
The BIOMAG-LL is a prospective, international, multi-center, single arm pre-market study that will enroll 100 patients in Europe with de novo coronary artery stenosis and long lesions. Given that the Freesolve RMS is already CE-certified for shorter lesions, the BIOMAG-LL study will evaluate its effectiveness in longer lesions with new device sizes including now 35 mm and 40 mm scaffold lengths to support a broader market release.
"We are pleased to introduce the BIOMAG-LL trial as a pre-market study with a particular focus on treating longer coronary lesions," says Prof. Flavio Ribichini, Interventional Cardiologist and Director of the Division of Cardiology at the University Hospital in Verona, Italy. "The exceptional results in target lesion failure rates and safety of the Freesolve scaffold in the previous BIOMAG-I- trials makes us confident in its potential for treating complex, long lesions.”
The first patient was successfully included in the trial at Prof. Erglis’ study site at Pauls Stradins Clinical University Hospital in Riga, Latvia by Dr. Inga Narbute.
The primary endpoint of the study is the target lesion failure (TLF) rate at 12 months. Patients will undergo clinical follow-up visits at one, six, and twelve months, as well as at three and five years after the procedure.
“With the BIOMAG-LL study, we’re expanding on the findings from the BIOMAG-I trial, exploring Freesolve’s potential to meet the treatment needs of patients with longer lesions in coronary arteries,” says Prof. Dr. Georg Nollert, Vice President Medical Affairs, Vascular Intervention at BIOTRONIK. “With this study we aim to prove the efficacy of longer length Freesolve resorbable magnesium scaffolds and bring this unique technology to a broader range of patients.”
The two-year follow-up data from the BIOMAG-I trial, announced in May 2024, confirms Freesolve RMS as an effective alternative to contemporary drug-eluting stents (DES), demonstrating consistently low rates of TLF and no findings in scaffold thrombosis so far1. In parallel, BIOTRONIK has launched the BIOMAG-II randomized controlled trial in May 2024, to compare the clinical outcomes of Freesolve RMS and DES.
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References:
1 Haude M., BIOMAG-I: two-year clinical outcomes of the resorbable magnesium Scaffold-DREAMS 3G, presented at EuroPCR 2024
Disclaimer:
BIOMAG and Freesolve are trademarks or registered trademarks of the BIOTRONIK Group of Companies.
About BIOTRONIK:
At BIOTRONIK, patient well-being is our top priority and has been for over 60 years. BIOTRONIK is a leading global medical technology company with products and offerings that save and improve the lives of millions suffering from heart and blood vessel diseases as well as chronic pain. Driven by a purpose to perfectly match technology with the human body, we are dedicated innovators who develop trusted cardiovascular, endovascular and neuromodulation therapies. BIOTRONIK is headquartered in Berlin, Germany, and is represented in over 100 countries across the Americas, EMEA (Europe, the Middle East, and Africa), and Asia-Pacific.