Medinol Ltd.
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Latest From Medinol Ltd.
Global Approvals Analysis: Diabetes, Drug-Eluting Stents Lead List Of Non-US Approvals in October
The CE Marks recorded in October include Abbott's new version of Xience and Medinol's BioNIR drug-eluting coronary stents, plus 18 other devices approved in eight different territories.
New Products In Brief
Sanofi’s iBGStar blood glucose monitor. ProUroCare’s prostate imaging system. Edwards Lifesciences’ ThruPort IntraClude intra-aortic occlusion device. More new products.
From Boardroom to Benchtop: Paul LaViolette Joins SVLS
Paul LaViolette spent more than a decade at Boston Scientific where, among other things, he helped build the company into a cardiovascular powerhouse. LaViolette announced his retirement from BSC last year and after considering a number of opportunities, decided to join Boston-based SVLS as a venture partner. LaViolette enters venture investing at a challenging time, during which the industry will face what he calls "a Darwinian process with more operational pressure" at start-ups and a likely weeding out of many companies. In this interview, LaViolette describes how the venture world of 2008 feels a lot like Boston Scientific in 1993 -- a world of small, driven companies with huge operational challenges and huge opportunities.
The Top Device Stories of 2008
As 2008 draws to a close, In Vivo takes stock of the major events affecting the medical device industry in 2008. Two stories continue to unfold; how the new Obama administration will control national health spending, and the financial crisis that hit the US and global economies. The latter is already taking its toll on medtech. Financial markets crashed, and so did public device companies. M&A dwindled as the year went on, with some notable--and surprising--exceptions, and the downturn is driving VCs to invest either extremely early or late. In other stories: the Department of Justice continued probing into physician conflict of interest matters, this time focusing on the influential Cardiovascular Research Foundation. Also from Washington, the 510(k) process is under review, and 2009 may see changes that make the process of demonstrating safety and effectiveness more costly for device companies. CMS instituted payment reforms affecting hospitals, although this may be good news for medtech companies offering products to help curb hospital-acquired infections and medical errors. The news was good in diabetes--for devices, not pharmaceuticals--with positive outcomes from a major trial on continuous glucose monitoring and two new markets opening up in diabetes for device manufacturers. The regulatory agency delivered some positive news to companies in cardiac rhythm management and neurostimulation too. And second generation drug-eluting stents found a market more receptive than it was a year ago.
Company Information
- Industry
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Pharmaceuticals
- Drug Delivery
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Medical Devices
- Implantable Devices
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Surgical Equipment & Devices
- Minimally or Less Invasive
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