CytoSorbents Announces Publication of U.S. CTC Multicenter Registry Results Using CytoSorb® in Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients on Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO)
MONMOUTH JUNCTION, N.J., Dec. 20, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- CytoSorbents, Inc. (NASDAQ: CTSO), a leader in the treatment of life-threatening conditions in the intensive care unit and cardiac surgery using blood purification via its proprietary polymer adsorption technology, announces the publication of results from the Company's U.S. CytoSorb Therapy in COVID-19 (CTC) retrospective registry in the peer-reviewed journal, Frontiers in Medicine. The new publication highlights 52 critically ill COVID-19 patients from 5 major U.S. ECMO (ExtraCorporeal Membrane Oxygenation) centers who received ECMO plus CytoSorb therapy for life-threatening refractory respiratory failure under FDA EUA between April 2020 and April 2021.1 As highlighted in topline results that were previously presented at the 40th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine (ISICEM 2021) conference in September, the primary outcome of 90-day ICU mortality was 26.9% from the initiation of CytoSorb treatment. For context, 90-day mortality among more than 6,400 adult patients in the North American cohort of the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) COVID-19 ECMO Registry is 50% (as of December 2021). Importantly, all 5 centers participating in the CTC registry reported that CytoSorb was easily integrated in the ECMO circuit and well-tolerated, with no unanticipated device-related adverse events. Dr. Phillip Chan, Chief Executive Officer of CytoSorbents stated, "We are pleased that this important data set showing high survival in critically ill COVID-19 patients on CytoSorb and ECMO in the U.S. has been peer-reviewed, published, and is now available to all current and potential users globally. This is especially important, in light of increasing COVID-19 related new cases and deaths being observed around the world driven by the Delta variant, and the threat of new variants such as Omicron. To date, CytoSorb has been used in more than 7,000 critically ill COVID-19 patients in more than 30 countries worldwide, including in the U.S. under FDA Emergency Use Authorization." Dr. Chan continued, "ECMO is a machine that pumps and oxygenates blood outside the body when a patient's lungs are so diseased that mechanical ventilation fails. Without ECMO, these patients - often considered among the sickest in the ICU - would normally die. ECMO can take the burden off of the lungs, helping them to rest. During the pandemic, this strategy has helped roughly half of the critically ill COVID-19 patients on ECMO to survive. However, ECMO does not remove the circulating inflammatory cytokines and other toxins that can contribute to ongoing injury to the lungs and other vital organs and prevent or delay healing. With Dr. Robert Bartlett, the pioneer of ECMO, our former Chief Medical Officer of 10 years, and contributing author to the CTC Registry publication, we developed the medical premise of enhanced lung rest, using CytoSorb to reduce damaging circulating inflammatory toxins while ECMO rests the lungs. The goal is to promote lung healing and recovery – a prerequisite to getting patients off of mechanical ventilation and ECMO, and to survive. The positive data from our CTC Registry, and much of the international published literature using CytoSorb and ECMO together in both COVID and non-COVID-19 patients, support this enhanced lung rest strategy, provided that it is used early enough in the disease where irreversible injury has not yet occurred." Dr. Chan concluded, "CytoSorb and ECMO are two increasingly utilized individual critical care technologies around the world. Together, they may play a vital role in the early treatment of major unmet clinical needs such as moderate to severe lung injury, including ARDS, and as a potentially important sales growth opportunity for our Company." 1About CytoSorb and U.S. FDA Emergency Use Authorization About CytoSorbents Corporation (NASDAQ: CTSO) CytoSorbents' purification technologies are based on biocompatible, highly porous polymer beads that can actively remove toxic substances from blood and other bodily fluids by pore capture and surface adsorption. Its technologies have received non-dilutive grant, contract, and other funding of more than $39.5 million from DARPA, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), the U.S. Army, the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM), Air Force Material Command (USAF/AFMC), and others. The Company has numerous marketed products and products under development based upon this unique blood purification technology protected by many issued U.S. and international patents and registered trademarks, and multiple patent applications pending, including ECOS-300CY®, CytoSorb-XL™, HemoDefend-RBC™, HemoDefend-BGA™, VetResQ®, K+ontrol™, DrugSorb™, DrugSorb™-ATR, ContrastSorb, and others. For more information, please visit the Company's websites at www.cytosorbents.com and www.cytosorb.com or follow us on Facebook and Twitter. Forward-Looking Statements Please Click to Follow Us on Facebook and Twitter Investor Relations Contact: U.S. Public Relations Contact:
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Company Codes: NASDAQ-SMALL:CTSO |