ElectroCore’s
gammaCore noninvasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) device
demonstrated feasibility and a safe profile when treating patients with
ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke, study results showed. On
diffusion-weighted imaging, patients saw reductions in relative infarct
growth, suggesting efficacious outcomes as well.1
The findings were presented at the 2022 American Academy of Neurology (AAN) Annual Meeting ,
April 2-7, in Seattle, Washington, by lead author Ethem M. Arsava, PhD,
professor of neurology, Hacettepe University. After previously showing
efficacy in treating conditions such as migraine and other sleep
disorders, this marked the first study demonstrating gammaCore’s
feasibility among patients with stroke.
In total, 60 patients with
ischemic stroke and 8 patients with hemorrhagic stroke completed the
study. Patients were randomized to either low- or high-dose nVNS or sham
within 6 hours of stroke onset. For those on sham, they received 7,
stimulations of 2 minutes applied to their skin overlying the vagus
nerve every 10 minutes for 1 hour, whereas those in the high-dose group
received 14 stimulations of 2 minutes every 10 minutes during hour 1 and
hour 5. Safety outcomes were evaluated 2 and 5 minutes after each
stimulation and 30 minutes after the final stimulation.
At
baseline, characteristics between the sham (n = 22) and nVNS (n = 44)
groups did not differ. Following treatment, bradycardia (≤50 beats/min),
one of the study’s primary safety end points, was observed in 2.9% of
those on sham and 3.1% of those on nVNS (P = .965) and was
considered not significant. Similarly, hypotension (≥20-mm-Hg reduction
in arterial blood pressure), occurring in 1.1% and 2.5% of sham- and
nVNS-treated patients, respectively, was also not significant (P = .145).
READ MORE: Intensive Blood Pressure Target Leads to Increased Cerebral Perfusion, SPRINT MIND Data Suggest
Arsava
et al found no deaths, stimulation site reactions, or cases of acute
coronary syndrome or symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage, following
treatment with nVNS. On diffusion-weighted imaging, relative infarct
growth was lower in the high-dose nVNS group (63.3%) than the sham group
(185.8%; P = .05). Investigators noted that clinical efficacy measures were similar between the sham and nVNS groups.
The use of VNS to treat stroke is not an entirely new concept to the field. In August 2021, the FDA-approved MicoTransponder’s Vivistim Paired VNS System
for the treatment of moderate to severe upper extremity motor deficits
associated with chronic stroke, the first of its kind to receive this
indication. The Vivistim System features an implantable pulse generator
(IPG) that is placed just under the skin in the chest of the patient.
Attached to the IPG is a lead wire that leads up to the electrodes
placed on the left side of the neck.2
Placed on a
patient’s neck over the vagus nerve, the gammaCore device aims to
stimulate the nerve’s different fibers. When it received its original
FDA greenlight, it became the first noninvasive hand-held medical
therapy applied at the neck to treat migraine and cluster headache.
Since then, it has gained expanded indications to acutely treat pain
associated with episodic cluster headache, and the acute and
preventative treatment of migraine in adolescents (ages 12 years and
older).
In September 2021, the device received FDA approval
to treat patients with paroxysmal hemicrania and hemicrania continue in
adult patients, making it the first treatment—drug or device—to be
approved for these patient populations.3 Data from multiple
clinical audits and case series/case reports, including one which found
more than three-fourths of the cohort to benefit from the device, were
the basis for that decision.
Click here for more coverage of AAN 2022 .
REFERENCES 1.
Arsava EM, Topcuoglu MA, Ay I, Liebler E, Ay H. Non-invasive vagus
nerve stimulation for the acute treatment of stroke. Presented at: AAN
Annual Meeting; April 2-7, 2022; in Seattle, WA, and virtual. Abstract
0535 2. FDA Approves First-of-Its-Kind Stroke Rehabilitation System. News release. FDA. August 27, 2021. Accessed April 4, 2022. https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/fda-approves-first-of-its-kind-stroke-rehabilitation-system-301364373.html 3.
electroCore announces 510(k) clearance of gammaCore non-invasive vagus
nerve stimulation (nvNS) to treat paroxysmal hemicrania and hemicrania
continua. News release. September 14, 2021. Accessed April 4, 2022. https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2021/09/14/2296594/0/en/electroCore-Announces-510-k-Clearance-of-gammaCore-Non-Invasive-Vagus-Nerve-Stimulation-nVNS-to-Treat-Paroxysmal-Hemicrania-and-Hemicrania-Continua.html
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