First Patient Fitted With Carmat Artificial Heart Dies, Cause Unknown

The first patient fitted with an artificial heart made by the French company Carmat has died, the hospital that had performed the transplant in December said on Monday.

Claiming that the cause of his death could not be known for sure at this stage, the Georges Pompidou European Hospital in Paris said in a statement on Sunday that the 76-year-old man died 75 days after the operation, Reuters reported.58 Views: 181

The man was suffering from terminal heart failure, when the sick heart can no longer pump enough blood to sustain the body, and was said to have only a few weeks, or even days, to live when he was fitted with the device.

According to Reuters, using biological materials and sensors, Carmat's bioprosthetic device is designed to replace the real heart for as much as five years, mimicking nature's work. It aims to help the thousands of patients who die each year while awaiting a donor, and reducing the side-effects associated with transplants.

"Carmat wishes to pay tribute to the courage and the pioneering role of this patient and his family, as well as the medical team's dedication," a company spokeswoman said.

She stressed that it was premature to draw any conclusions on Carmat's artificial heart at this stage.

The device is due to be fitted on three more patients with terminal heart failure in France. If the patients survive with the implant for at least a month, the clinical trial will be considered a success.

If it passes the test, Carmat has said it would fit the device into about 20 patients with less severe heart failure, Reuters reported.

"The doctors directly involved in the post-surgical care wish to highlight the value of the lessons learned from this first clinical trial, with regard to the selection of the patient, his surveillance, the prevention and treatment of difficulties encountered," the hospital said in its statement.

An in-depth analysis of the medical and technical data gathered since the patient's operation will be needed to establish the cause of his death, the hospital added.

A market worth more than $22 billion, Carmat estimates around 100,000 patients in the United States and Europe could benefit from its artificial heart.

Privately-held SynCardia Systems and Abiomed, both of the United States, are among Carmat's competitors for artificial heart implants.

"SynCardia's artificial heart is the only one approved both in the United States and the European Union and has been implanted in more than 1,200 patients to keep them waiting for a heart from a matching donor," Reuters reported. "The longest a patient has lived with the device is just under four years prior to a transplant."

Reuters added, "Carmat's heart is designed to serve not as a bridge to transplant but as a permanent implant, extending life for terminally ill patients who cannot hope for a real organ, generally because they are too old and donors too scarce."

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