Medtronic receives E.U. approval for key new defibrillator system

The company anticipates approval in the U.S. for the system sometime within the first half of 2023.

February 17, 2023 at 10:22PM
Medtronic has received E.U. approval for a new defibrillator system. (Glen Stubbe, Star Tribune file/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

After years of research and development, medical technology giant Medtronic is planning to commercially launch a new extravascular defibrillator system the company hopes will impact patients with abnormal heart rhythms.

The company — based in Ireland but run from Fridley — announced on Friday it had received European Union approval of its Aurora EV-ICD (extravascular implantable cardioverter defibrillator) and Epsila EV defibrillation lead system.

The company said it anticipates approval in the U.S. for the system sometime within the first half of 2023.

The E.U. approval is a significant step forward for the company. It's also a significant step in treating cardiac heart rhythm disorders.

Each year, more than 356,000 Americans suffer from sudden cardiac arrest — an electrical problem with the organ caused by a dangerously fast heart rate — outside of a hospital setting, according to the American Heart Association.

Nearly 90% of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests are fatal, according to the AHA.

The market could be even higher since it would include people at risk for cardiac arrest.

People who survive cardiac arrest, or are at risk of having one, are candidates for implantable defibrillators that shock their hearts back into its normal rhythm. Sometimes, though, people with those cardioverter defibrillators — which typically are implanted in the chest and attached to thin wires that are threaded through veins and into the heart — are subject to health issues stemming from the wire's connection.

The thin wire can lead to long-term complications like narrowing, blockage or compression of a vein and risks of blood infections. The thin wire in Medtronic's new system, which the company says is a first of its kind, is placed outside the heart and veins under the breastbone, avoiding transvenous wires. The Aurora defibrillator is implanted below the left armpit.

"This approval is a significant milestone in achieving our goal of delivering a defibrillation solution that treats sudden cardiac arrest while improving the patient experience," said Alan Cheng, chief medical officer of Medtronic's cardiac rhythm management business.

The Aurora EV-ICD system was developed in Minnesota. Workers at Medtronic had been building evidence for a commercial offering of such a device for more than a decade, and first began publishing research on extravascular implantable cardioverter defibrillator systems for just as long, according to a spokesperson. (Medtronic/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

This past December in a SEC filing, Medtronic reported fiscal 2023 second quarter earnings of $2.7 billion for its cardiovascular segment, down from $2.82 billion for the same quarter in 2021. The company's cardiovascular segment includes implantable cardioverter defibrillators, thin wires and delivery systems. Specifically, the cardiac rhythm and heart failure division made $1.43 billion in the quarter.

Cardiovascular net sales for the most recent six-month period ending Oct. 28 were $5.5 billion, a 4% drop compared with the same period in 2021.

about the writer

Nick Williams

Prep Sports Team Leader

Nick Williams is Preps Sports Team Leader at the Minnesota Star Tribune. He joined the Star Tribune as a business reporter in 2021. Prior to his eight years as a business reporter in Minnesota and Wisconsin, he was a sports writer for 12 years in Florida and New York.

See More

More from Business

Dr. Shruti K. Gohil, associate medical director for epidemiology and infection prevention at UCI Medical Center, holds a dose of MMR, the vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella. (Ana Venegas/Orange County Register/TNS) ORG XMIT: 1163174 ORG XMIT: MIN1501282305177647 ORG XMIT: MIN1502031200399233

Health officials say the recent outbreak of the highly contagious virus looked bad this summer, but optimism is growing they may have contained it.

Light and dark arrows pointing in opposite directions over a file photo of white and black school children in the 1950s.
card image