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UVA Announces Launch of Focused Ultrasound Study for Parkinson's Disease

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PRESS RELEASE U.Va. To Test Focused Ultrasound for Treating Parkinson’s Disease October 11, 2012 After a promising clinical trial of focused ultrasound as a potential treatment for essential tremor, the University of Virginia Health System is launching a new study to investigate the scalpel-free technology’s safety and effectiveness in reducing tremor related to Parkinson’s disease. The phase 1 clinical trial has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and is expected to enroll 30 subjects with medication-resistant Parkinson’s disease. The subjects will undergo an investigational procedure using focused sound waves delivered within a magnetic resonance scanner to target a small area deep in the brain. Unlike traditional brain surgery, there is no need to cut into the skull. “We are very encouraged by our initial experience with MRI-guided focused ultrasound. There is a tremendous amount of enthusiasm from our patients and the public for treatments without incisions,” Dr. Jeff Elias, the trial’s principal investigator, said. “Parkinson’s disease is the next logical step on our roadmap of investigation.” Elias previously conducted the first focused ultrasound trial for treatment of essential tremor. All 15 trial participants were discharged the day after their procedures, and tremor improvement has been seen throughout follow-up. “The technology allowed us to safely perform the procedure in all 15 of the patients, and none of them received any anesthesia,” Elias said. “They got a similar degree of tremor control that we see with other surgical procedures like deep brain stimulation.” Elias is preparing the full findings of the essential tremor trial, and he expects to proceed to a larger, multicenter and international trial. Because the trial was the first of its kind, more work needs to be done to determine the long-term effectiveness of the procedure in treating essential tremor. As such, it remains investigational and is not yet available as a treatment outside a clinical trial. The new Parkinson’s trial will focused ultrasound’s safety and efficacy in treating tremor related to Parkinson’s disease, an incurable, neurodegenerative condition characterized by tremor and uncontrollable movements. Surgery can, in some cases, alleviate symptoms when medications have become ineffective. The current frontline surgical option is deep brain stimulation, which involves drilling holes in the skull and implanting a pacemaker system in the brain. U.Va.’s new Parkinson’s trial is sponsored jointly by the Focused Ultrasound Foundation, the Heller Foundation, the Commonwealth of Virginia and InSightec, the maker of the ultrasound device. Trial participants must have Parkinson’s disease with tremor that is resistant to standard medical therapy. To learn more about focused ultrasound at U.Va., visit uvahealth.com/focusedultrasound. The site includes a link to a database where those interested in being considered for the Parkinson’s trial should submit their information.
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Vendor Profile: Alpinion Medical Systems Offers a Pre-clinical Focused Ultrasound System

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Based in Seoul, Korea, Alpinion Medical Systems has been offering ultrasound devices since 2007. Half of its 185 employees are R&D engineers, indicating the company’s strong focus on product development and innovation. Alpinion has three core technologies: diagnostic ultrasound; ultrasound transducer technology and therapeutic ultrasound. It entered the therapeutic ultrasound market in 2011 with the introduction of its first high intensity focused ultrasound product, the VIFU 2000. A year earlier, the company opened an office in Seattle, Washington to focus on R&D for the VIFU 2000 and to expand sales in North America. Alpinion also has sales offices in Germany and China.
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First Parkinson’s Patients Scheduled for Treatment in Foundation-funded Study at UVA

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Focused ultrasound research will enter new territory in October when University of Virginia neurosurgeon W. Jeffrey Elias, MD performs the first investigational treatments on patients with tremor-dominant Parkinson’s disease. The study, which is being funded in part by the Focused Ultrasound Foundation, will enroll 30 patients and use a double-blinded protocol to randomly assign them to either treatment or control (sham treatment) groups. Designed to evaluate focused ultrasound’s safety and preliminary efficacy in treating tremor-dominant Parkinson’s disease, the study will follow patients’ progress for one year. Initially, 20 of the 30 study patients will be assigned to the treatment group. The remaining 10 patients will receive a sham treatment. Three months later, the 10 will be eligible to cross over into the treatment group and receive focused ultrasound therapy.
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Fundraising the Entrepreneurial Way—Howard and Fredi Stevenson Join Foundation Council Celebration of Science Aims to Re-energize America’s Commitment to Bioscience Focused Ultrasound Researchers Are Encouraged to Submit Abstracts to the 2013 International Stereotactic Radiosurgery Society Congress New Metamaterial Device Focuses Sound Waves and May Eliminate Need for Transducers of Different Sizes Emily McDuffie is Focused Ultrasound Foundation's New Deveopment Associate