CoapTech, Inc, a medical device company focused on delivering transformative solutions for minimally-invasive surgery, announced today publication of study results conducted at the University of Maryland Baltimore Washington Medical Center (UM BWMC) comparing percutaneous gastrostomies placed with the PUMA-G System™ to those placed with usual care methods.
BALTIMORE, May 11, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- CoapTech, Inc, a medical device company focused on delivering transformative solutions for minimally-invasive surgery, announced today publication of study results conducted at the University of Maryland Baltimore Washington Medical Center (UM BWMC) comparing percutaneous gastrostomies placed with the PUMA-G System™ to those placed with usual care methods. This peer-reviewed study, published in the May issue of the Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, confirms and quantifies cost and length of stay reductions with use of the PUMA-G System. Unnecessary hospital costs were hypothesized to result from workflow inefficiencies and delays in patient care. Today, the majority of gastrostomy tubes for ICU patients are placed by specialists either in an operating suite, or at the bedside with a mobile endoscopy tower. Both approaches require coordination of multiple consulting services, often require patient transport, and ultimately result in increased ICU and hospital lengths of stay (LOS). CoapTech’s PUG procedure allows front-line ICU intensivists to place gastrostomy tubes at the bedside using point-of-care ultrasound at the time of indication, thereby reducing costly delays and improving workflow. “The PUG program has positively impacted our ICU providers by making care more efficient, helped patients and families by reducing ICU and hospital length of stay, and benefited the hospital bottom line by substantially reducing total costs of care,” stated Kathy McCollum, President and CEO of UM BWMC, the Glen Burnie, Maryland hospital where the research was conducted and a member organization of the University of Maryland Medical System. This single-center retrospective cohort study was conducted in a 36-bed, mixed medical/surgical ICU at UM BWMC. Between July 2020 and March 2021, 88 patients with ventilatory dependent respiratory failure received either PUG (45 patients) or usual care (43 patients) gastrostomies. Whether the patient received PUG or usual care was determined solely by whether the presiding attending physician was trained in PUG. The primary outcomes were intensive care unit length of stay (ICULOS) and total hospital costs. Patient demographic and clinical characteristics thought to potentially influence ICULOS and hospital costs were compared and no differences were observed. Patients who received PUG were found to have significantly shorter mean ICULOS and hospital LOS than those who received usual care, with reductions of 5.0 and 8.7 days respectively. Total hospital costs per patient were reduced by an average of $26,621 in the PUG group. Secondary outcomes were mortality and discharge disposition, of which no differences between the PUG and usual care groups were observed (as expected). “PUG is a simple, safe, and broadly accessible procedure that can be performed by intensivists at the bedside,” said Jeffrey Marshall, MD, a pulmonary and critical care physician at UM BWMC and an investigator in the study. “Our study demonstrated significant reductions in LOS and total hospital costs when the PUG procedure was performed versus usual care.” Other notable findings of the study include:
“This study confirms the economic value of the PUMA-G System to hospitals,” remarked CoapTech Co-Founder and CEO Howard Carolan. “Extrapolating the $26,000 cost savings per patient to the entire study group would translate to an annualized $2.5 million cost reduction for the hospital.” CoapTech spun out of the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) where the technology was developed. UMB’s technology transfer arm, UM Ventures, Baltimore, also provided direct investment in the company. “We’re excited to see CoapTech’s study results. They provide additional support for a hospital to use CoapTech’s PUMA-G System for patient care,” said Phil Robilotto, associate vice president for the Office of Technology Transfer at UMB, and director of UM Ventures, Baltimore. “The findings are an important addition to the growing body of clinical and economic evidence for PUG.” Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health under award 2R44DK115325. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. The peer-reviewed study is published in the May issue of the Journal of Intensive Care Medicine. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/08850666221097018 About CoapTech About the University of Maryland Baltimore Washington Medical Center About the University of Maryland Medical System About the University of Maryland, Baltimore and UM Ventures
SOURCE CoapTech LLC |