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Medtronic First to Receive FDA Approval for MR-Conditional Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator System

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | September 14, 2015
DUBLIN - Sept. 14, 2015 - Medtronic plc (NYSE: MDT) today announced that it has received the first U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) system for use with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. The Medtronic Evera MRI(TM) SureScan® ICD System is approved for MRI scans on any part of the body without positioning restrictions, which means that patients in the U.S. who depend on life-saving ICDs also now have access to MRI scans if and when they need them. The newly approved system, which will be commercially available this month, includes the Evera MRI ICD and Sprint Quattro® Secure MRI SureScan® DF4 leads, which must be used together to be considered MR-conditional.

"Patients at risk for sudden cardiac arrest have long relied on ICDs to monitor their hearts, detect dangerous arrhythmias and deliver the life-saving therapy needed to survive," said Michael R. Gold, M.D., Ph.D., chief of cardiology, Michael E Assey Professor of Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina, and principal investigator in the Evera MRI Clinical Trial. "Many of these patients also need access to MRIs, so the approval of an ICD that can be used in an MRI environment is crucial, and can help provide patients with the peace of mind that they are receiving the best care available."

Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) is a sudden, abrupt loss of heart function that can result in death if not treated within minutes with an electrical cardioverter shock, which can be delivered by an ICD. MRI is considered the gold standard in soft-tissue imaging and is used regularly for the diagnosis of conditions such as stroke, cancer, Alzheimer's disease, and muscle, bone and joint pain.
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Until now, patients with ICD systems have been contraindicated by the FDA from receiving MRI scans because of potential interactions between the MRI and device function, which might result in risk to patients. These MRI restrictions have resulted in a critical unmet need as data have shown that, within four years, more than one-third of patients with ICDs - 36 percent - are likely to need an MRI.1

The Evera MRI ICD system includes hardware and software design enhancements from previous generation devices that allow it to safely undergo full-body MRIs, while maintaining the same longevity, proven shock reduction and physiological size and shape of the original Evera ICD. The device is paired with the Sprint Quattro® Secure MRI SureScan® DF4 leads, part of the only ICD lead family with more than 10 years of proven performance with active monitoring,2 now tested for safe use in an MRI environment.

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