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New Discoveries on a
Fingertip Test for Screening Silent Heart Disease
Promising Results of Recent Clinical Studies to be Presented
during the 2009 American College of Cardiology Conference,
March 29th - April 1st in Orlando
Orlando, March 29th, 2009
– Results of five clinical studies evaluating the predictive
value of VENDYS®, the new FDA-approved cardiovascular test,
will be presented at the 2009 Annual Scientific Sessions of
the American College of Cardiology in Orlando, Florida. The
studies, amazingly, show that a simple, inexpensive test
that measures temperature changes at the fingertips can help
detect hidden coronary artery disease.
Presentation Number: 1036-264
Abstract Title: Vascular
Dysfunction Measured by Digital Thermal Monitoring Strongly
Correlates With the Extent of Coronary Artery Disease
Diagnosed by 64 Slice Multidetector Computed
Tomography
Presentation Time: Monday, Mar 30, 2009, 9:30 AM -10:30 AM
Topic: CT Coronary Angiography
Presentation Number: 1036-281
Abstract Title: High Risk
Subclinical Coronary Atherosclerosis Is Associated With
Impaired Macro and Micro -Vascular Reactivity
Presentation Time: Monday, Mar 30, 2009, 9:30 AM -10:30 AM
Topic: CT Coronary Angiography
Presentation Number: 1040-102
Abstract Title: Vascular
Dysfunction Measured by Digital Thermal Reactivity Is
Strongly Associated With the Severity of Obstructive
Coronary Artery Disease
Presentation
Time: Monday, Mar 30, 2009, 3:30 PM - 4:30 PM
Topic: Vascular--Pathophysiology—Clinical
Presentation Number: 1045-255
Abstract Title: Relationship of
Oxidized LDL Biomarkers, Persistent Vascular Dysfunction
Measured by Fingertip Digital Thermal Monitoring and
Progression of Coronary Artery Calcification Presentation
Time: Monday, Mar 30, 2009, 3:30 PM - 4:30 PM
Topic: CT Coronary Calcium and Noncoronary CT Applications
Presentation Number: 1054-235
Abstract Title: Vascular
Dysfunction Measured by Fingertip Thermal Monitoring Is
Associated With Abnormal Myocardial Perfusion
Presentation Time: Tuesday, Mar 31, 2009, 9:30 AM -10:30 AM
Topic: Nuclear Cardiology/PET
“We now have hundreds of patients studied at our center with
VENDYS, and the results have consistently shown strong
correlation between low fingertip temperature rebound and
high burden of coronary plaques. The lower the temperature
rebound, the more plaque buildup and blockage,” said Dr.
Mathew Budoff, Associate Professor of Medicine and Director
of Cardiac CT Laboratory at Harbor UCLA. “This is truly
amazing! VENDYS is the only non-invasive, non-imaging,
office-based test that I am aware of with such a high
predictive value for detection of high risk coronary
patients. We are seeing similar results in CT angiography,
as well as nuclear, studies.”
Researchers hope that VENDYS, by measuring a dynamic marker
of vascular disease, can fill the gap in existing
cardiovascular risk assessment and complement traditional
risk factor measurements as well as advanced, structural
imaging tests, such as CAT scan and MRI.
“I acknowledge that it doesn't seem logical that measuring
the temperature of your finger can predict your likelihood
of having a heart attack,” said Dr. Craig Hartley, a
Professor of Cardiovascular Sciences at Baylor College of
Medicine. “Many of us were skeptical too, but the physiology
for evaluating vascular reactivity is well established, and
the preliminary data clearly show the potential of the
method.”
Researchers at Harbor UCLA Medical Center examined patients
with the VENDYS® test before they underwent coronary CT
angiography and a thallium nuclear scan. The study showed
that those with coronary blockage and abnormal scan results
often had low fingertip temperature reactivity. Dr. Budoff
and colleagues also studied apparently healthy individuals
with a family history of heart disease or with other
cardiovascular risk factors. They discovered that the lower
the fingertip thermal reactivity, the higher the chance of
having a coronary blockage or calcium score >100 -both of
which would place these individuals at a high risk of a
future heart attack.
“The VENDYS technology was originally developed at our
laboratory in the Texas Heart Institute while working on
vulnerable plaque detection,” said Dr. Morteza Naghavi,
inventor of the VENDYS® technology. “Despite exciting
developments in intracoronary plaque characterization, it
became obvious to me that we needed a non-invasive and
inexpensive way to screen and monitor at risk patients,
simply because you can’t cath asymptomatic people, nor can
you put stable patients into CT or MRI machine every 3
months to evaluate their progress.” He added, “Frankly, at
the time, I didn’t expect it to be so surprising in terms of
its predictive value compared to risk factors. But now,
looking at the data, it makes sense, because it does not
measure an individual risk factor, like cholesterol;
instead, it reflects vascular function which is affected by
numerous risk and protective factors, much like blood
pressure. Furthermore, unlike coronary calcium or carotid
IMT, it is a dynamic marker and changes quickly with the
progression and regression of the disease.”
Every year, over 1.4 million heart attacks occur in the
United States and many more worldwide. About half of these
heart attacks happen in healthy-looking individuals who had
no previous symptoms of heart disease. Had these individuals
been tested by existing, cardiovascular risk factor-based
screening tests on the day before their heart attack, the
majority (over 70%) of them would not have been classified
as high risk. This clearly illustrates the shortcomings of
the status quo (Problem 1). The other half of heart attacks
happens in patients with known heart disease, who were
believed to be on adequate treatments. This illustrates the
inadequacy of existing methods of monitoring patients’
response to treatments (Problem 2).
Current methods for screening and early detection of CVD
include blood tests for measurement of traditional risk
factors (such as high cholesterol) or advanced, non-invasive
imaging techniques such as CAT scan and MRI. While
traditional risk factors are good for long-term prediction
of future CVD, they do not assess the state of an
individual’s vascular health. Moreover, advanced imaging
modalities are costly (e.g., MRI) or pose hazardous
radiation (e.g., CT scan); therefore, they cannot be used
frequently (weekly or monthly).
“I am amazed by the predictive power that VENDYS has shown
in these studies,” said Dr. Harvey Hecht, Chairman of
Endothelix Scientific Advisory Board and Director of
Cardiovascular Computed Tomography at Lenox Hill Heart and
Vascular Institute. “In terms of sensitivity and specificity
for the detection of high risk patients, its area under the
ROC curve is well above all traditional risk factors put
together. If these findings are corroborated by others, it
will be the first non-imaging test that has exhibited a
predictive value close to that of imaging tests, which
obviously are far more expensive and less suitable for mass
screening. I am so impressed that I have personally
incorporated VENDYS into my office practice, and I believe
it can improve risk assessment in patients with low to
intermediate Framingham risk.”
About Endothelix
Endothelix
Inc. is based in Houston, Texas. The company is positioned
as the first to incorporate non-invasive, non-imaging
vascular and neurovascular function monitoring technologies
into the existing risk factor based assessment of
cardiovascular risk. Endothelix aims to help physicians
address the two major problems that exist in cardiovascular
care today, namely 1) inaccurate individualized assessment
of cardiovascular risk and 2) inadequate monitoring of
vascular response to treatments.
Note: During the ACC 2009 Conference, on Sunday (9:30 –
10:30 pm), Endothelix will hold a “Drink & Draw” event at
Rosen Plaza Hotel Backstage Club, where a lucky person will
win the VENDYS round-trip business class ticket to AHA 2009
(Annual Scientific Sessions of American Heart Association,
which will also be held in Orlando in November).
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