Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Tuesday, October 15 2019 - 23:00
AsiaNet
CartiHeal Performs First Agili-C(TM) Cartilage Repair Implantation Procedure in Maryland
KFAR SABA, Israel/ Oct. 15, 2019/PRNewswire--AsiaNet/--

The procedure was performed by Jason M. Scopp, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at 
Peninsula Orthopaedic Clinic in Salisbury, Maryland 

CartiHeal, developer of Agili-C(TM), a proprietary implant for the treatment of 
cartilage lesions in arthritic and non-arthritic joints, announced today the 
first implantation of the Agili-C(TM) implant, as part of Investigational 
Device Exemption (IDE) clinical study by Dr. Jason M. Scopp, orthopedic surgeon 
and Director of Joint Preservation Center at Peninsula Orthopaedic Clinic in 
Salisbury, Maryland. 

The clinical study will involve a minimum of 250 study patients, currently 241 
patients have already been enrolled.

Peninsula Orthopaedic Clinic is one of 15 U.S. clinical sites participating in 
this randomized and controlled IDE clinical study. The primary study objective 
is to demonstrate the superiority of the Agili-C(TM) implant over the current 
surgical standards of care: microfracture and debridement in the treatment of 
large spectrum cartilage defects.

"Our first patient was a 50-year-old male with moderate osteoarthritis and with 
two large cartilage defects in a total surface area of 6.8 cm[2]. One defect 
was located in the trochlea and the second defect was located on the medial 
femoral condyle. The patient was randomized to the Agili-C(TM) treatment arm 
and was treated with 3 implants.

Patients who have cartilage defects are looking for options to not only treat 
their pain, but also delay the need for joint replacements," said Dr. Scopp. "I 
was very pleased that this patient was randomized to the Agili-C group, as I 
believe it will provide the solution he is seeking. As the Director of the 
Joint Preservation Center at Peninsula Orthopaedic Associates, I am able to 
offer my patients the state of the art techniques to preserve their joints and 
maintain an active lifestyle. I am excited to enroll more patients who meet the 
inclusion criteria."

CartiHeal's founder and CEO, Nir Altschuler, stated: "We are very pleased that 
Dr. Scopp has joined our study. With 241 patients already enrolled we are 
expecting to perform an interim analysis very shortly, once the remaining 9 
study patients are enrolled."

About CartiHeal
CartiHeal, a privately-held medical device company headquartered in Israel and 
New Jersey, develops proprietary implants for the treatment of cartilage and 
osteochondral defects in traumatic and osteoarthritic joints.
CartiHeal's cell-free, off-the-shelf implant is CE marked for use in cartilage 
and osteochondral defects. Agili-C(TM has been implanted in over 500 study 
patients with knee, ankle, and great toe cartilage lesions in a series of 
clinical trials at leading centers in Europe and Israel – treating a broad 
spectrum of cartilage lesions, from single focal lesions to multiple and large 
defects in osteoarthritic patients.

In the United States, the Agili-C(TM) implant is not available for sale – it is 
an investigational device limited for use in the IDE clinical study.

Contact: 
www.cartiheal.com
info@cartiheal.com 

Photo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1010944/CartiHeal_Agili_C_Dr_Scopp.jpg 
Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/451231/CartiHeal_Logo.jpg 

SOURCE:  CartiHeal