PR Newswire01.31.19
Boston Scientific Corporation announced the launch of the Spectra WaveWriter Spinal Cord Stimulator (SCS) System in Europe. The Spectra WaveWriter SCS System is the first and only system for the treatment of chronic pain to be able to simultaneously combine paresthesia-based and sub-perception therapy. The new system with these therapeutic options is designed to allow physicians and patients to customize therapy and capture real-time feedback to treat chronic and debilitating pain successfully.
SCS works by sending electrical impulses to the spinal cord and masking the pain messages traveling to the brain. These electrical impulses can vary in frequency, pulse width, and amplitude and provide pain relief with a light tingling sensation known as paresthesia-based therapy or with sub-perception therapy that works without sensation.
The Spectra WaveWriter SCS System allows physicians and patients to specifically target one area of pain, or multiple areas, with one or both types of therapy to address individual needs. Patients are also able to provide real-time feedback, using the Spectra WaveWriter SCS System Remote Control which is designed to simplify and personalize their therapy.
"Pain is very personal, and everyone experiences it differently. Pain also changes over time, which for chronic pain patients means that their bodies may become accustomed to treatment and its effectiveness declines," said Dr. Vivek Mehta, Consultant in Pain Medicine and Honorary Senior Lecturer, Queen Mary University, London and Director, Pain & Anaesthesia Research Centre, Barts Health, London. "The Spectra WaveWriter SCS System allows us to combine multiple treatment options in one single device, intended to give patients truly personalized therapy that evolves just as their pain does to provide lasting relief."
The Spectra WaveWriter SCS System was developed with more than a decade of clinical research focused on optimizing sub-perception and delivering multiple therapies intended for more effective, long-term pain relief. These studies include the WHISPER study and the PROCO study*. In addition, the first clinical multi-center, observational real-world data with over 200 patients using the Spectra WaveWriter SCS System demonstrated significant improvement in overall pain, with almost 90 percent of patients reporting more than a 50 percent improvement in their pain1.
"We understand the complex challenges people living with chronic pain face daily. Often these people have lived with agonizing and unbearable pain for years, having tried numerous treatments that simply do not work," said Vincent Sourdaine, vice president, Neuromodulation, Boston Scientific EMEA. "We are committed to research and development of treatment options for the millions of people who are severely affected by chronic pain and are very pleased to be introducing this new system to help patients manage this."
Chronic pain is a widespread problem with 1 in 5 adults in Europe—or 100 million people—affected.2 SCS is a non-opioid alternative for treating pain; the use of medications such as opioids has increased sharply in recent years in Europe3, with around 1.3 million high-risk users of opioid drugs according to a recent report4.
References
1 Outcomes Using an SCS Device Capable of Delivering Combination Therapy (Simultaneous or Sequential) and Advanced Waveforms/Field Shapes. Metzger C et al. Poster EU-INS 2018
2 Societal Impact of Pain, 2016. Abstract & Background Booklet. https://www.sip-platform.eu/sip2016booklet. Last accessed: January 2019
3 Trends in the consumption of opioids for the treatment of severe pain in Europe, 1990-2016. Bosetti et al. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30407692 Last accessed: January 2019.
4 European Drug Report, Trends and Developments. European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction. Last accessed: January 2019 www.emcdda.europa.eu/system/files/publications/4541/TDAT17001ENN.pdf
SCS works by sending electrical impulses to the spinal cord and masking the pain messages traveling to the brain. These electrical impulses can vary in frequency, pulse width, and amplitude and provide pain relief with a light tingling sensation known as paresthesia-based therapy or with sub-perception therapy that works without sensation.
The Spectra WaveWriter SCS System allows physicians and patients to specifically target one area of pain, or multiple areas, with one or both types of therapy to address individual needs. Patients are also able to provide real-time feedback, using the Spectra WaveWriter SCS System Remote Control which is designed to simplify and personalize their therapy.
"Pain is very personal, and everyone experiences it differently. Pain also changes over time, which for chronic pain patients means that their bodies may become accustomed to treatment and its effectiveness declines," said Dr. Vivek Mehta, Consultant in Pain Medicine and Honorary Senior Lecturer, Queen Mary University, London and Director, Pain & Anaesthesia Research Centre, Barts Health, London. "The Spectra WaveWriter SCS System allows us to combine multiple treatment options in one single device, intended to give patients truly personalized therapy that evolves just as their pain does to provide lasting relief."
The Spectra WaveWriter SCS System was developed with more than a decade of clinical research focused on optimizing sub-perception and delivering multiple therapies intended for more effective, long-term pain relief. These studies include the WHISPER study and the PROCO study*. In addition, the first clinical multi-center, observational real-world data with over 200 patients using the Spectra WaveWriter SCS System demonstrated significant improvement in overall pain, with almost 90 percent of patients reporting more than a 50 percent improvement in their pain1.
"We understand the complex challenges people living with chronic pain face daily. Often these people have lived with agonizing and unbearable pain for years, having tried numerous treatments that simply do not work," said Vincent Sourdaine, vice president, Neuromodulation, Boston Scientific EMEA. "We are committed to research and development of treatment options for the millions of people who are severely affected by chronic pain and are very pleased to be introducing this new system to help patients manage this."
Chronic pain is a widespread problem with 1 in 5 adults in Europe—or 100 million people—affected.2 SCS is a non-opioid alternative for treating pain; the use of medications such as opioids has increased sharply in recent years in Europe3, with around 1.3 million high-risk users of opioid drugs according to a recent report4.
References
1 Outcomes Using an SCS Device Capable of Delivering Combination Therapy (Simultaneous or Sequential) and Advanced Waveforms/Field Shapes. Metzger C et al. Poster EU-INS 2018
2 Societal Impact of Pain, 2016. Abstract & Background Booklet. https://www.sip-platform.eu/sip2016booklet. Last accessed: January 2019
3 Trends in the consumption of opioids for the treatment of severe pain in Europe, 1990-2016. Bosetti et al. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30407692 Last accessed: January 2019.
4 European Drug Report, Trends and Developments. European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction. Last accessed: January 2019 www.emcdda.europa.eu/system/files/publications/4541/TDAT17001ENN.pdf