Cambridge Heart, Inc. (CAMH) |
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This is a printer friendly page! Cambridge Heart is helping to manage
the risk of Sudden Cardiac Death (SCD) with their non-invasive Microvolt T-Wave Alternans Test (MTWA) Cambridge Heart, Inc. Bio: Mr. Chazanovitz has worked as a Divisional President
for NMT Medical, initially with total responsibility for establishing a start-up effort to
develop a new cardiac technology and more recently as President of their Neurosciences
Division. Mr. Chazanovitz has also held the position of President for several divisions of
C.R. Bard, Inc., including Bard Ventures, Bard Electrophysiology Division and USCI
Angiography Division. Mr. Chazanovitz earned a B.S. degree in Biology from
City College of New York and an MBA in Marketing from Long Island University. Awareness of Cambridge Hearts innovative
products continues to increase through the publication of clinical data from studies
performed in a broad range of patients showing that those patients who test positive for
Microvolt T-Wave Alternans are at increased risk for subsequent sudden cardiac events
including sudden death. Patients at risk for sudden cardiac death now have several
treatment options available to them, including implantable defibrillators and drug
therapy. What has been missing is an accurate, noninvasive method to identify those at
risk. Cambridge Heart now has a noninvasive product the Heartwave that can
detect patients at risk for sudden cardiac death who need lifesaving intervention. Mr. Chazanovitz: I
have been with Cambridge Heart for two and one half years. Cambridge Heart is a company
that has been around since the early 1990s, going public in 1996 with the assistance of
Goldman Sachs and Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. In the early years through the late 90s,
the emphasis of the company was on the research and development of Microvolt T-Wave
Alternans Test (MTWA) technology. For the last two to three years, the major
concentration has been on taking those developments and turning them into a real product
in the marketplace. We have moved from an R&D focus to a sales and marketing focus. Sudden cardiac death is not the same as a heart attack. Heart attacks are caused by vascular failure. Sudden cardiac death is caused by electrical abnormalities, and till now, testing for at-risk persons has been very difficult. Often theres no prior warning. Thats why automatic external defibrillators are placed in airplanes, airports and federal office buildings to shock the heart back into normal rhythms and allow the person to survive and be taken to a hospital. We want to identify those at-risk individuals before they fall over and are in need of a defibrillator. CEOCFOinterviews: What attracted you to Cambridge Heart? Mr. Chazanovitz: I was finishing up an assignment for a neurosurgery company in France and coming back to the United States, figuring out what would be the next stage in life for me. I have been in medical devices for virtually all of my career. Doing something that has medical importance is very vital to me. I have had the pleasure of developing some interesting products that have very high medical content, that are important to the medical community and to the patients that the medical community serves. Microvolt T-Wave Alternans is clearly one of those products. There are three to four hundred thousand sudden cardiac deaths in the U.S. each year. It is the number one cause of death in individuals 45 years and older, and one in seven will die from it. Most people fall over and die because they hadnt been identified as being at high-risk. If they knew they were at high-risk they could be protected with an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). The key is that they need to be easily and non-invasively identified. That is where Cambridge Heart and MTWA come in. It is the reason why I came here. CEOCFOinterviews: How does the product work and what does it do? Mr. Chazanovitz: Conceptually what we do is simple. We take a look at the electro-cardiogram of the individual while under some moderate exercise. If you have ever experienced a stress test, where electrodes are put on your chest and you are walking on a treadmill to exercise and raise your heartbeat, this is very much what our Microvolt T-Wave Alternans Test is like. We are looking for a very specific, very minute, change in the amplitude of the T-Wave portion of the electro-cardiogram on an every-other-beat basis. We find it with the use of our proprietary sensors, which are placed on the body during this exercise test. The disposable sensors pass information back into the actual product, the Heartwave, a custom computer that analyzes the signal using our patented algorithms. When we find an individual who is Microvolt T-Wave Alternans positive, we know weve found a person at risk of a sudden cardiac event. This individual should be protected with an implantable defibrillator. If a patient tests negative, even if they are in potentially high-risk populations with pre-existing coronary disease, we know that this is an individual at very low risk of falling over and dying of a sudden cardiac event CEOCFOinterviews: Is there any similar product out there? Mr. Chazanovitz: Not really; the closest thing that I would call competition is the Invasive Electrophysiology or EP Test. It is a test, which is done in a Cath Lab environment. Electrode catheters are snaked up a vein in the leg to the heart, and the electrophysiologist paces the heart using small jolts of low-energy electricity to try and pace the heart into the same bad-beat rhythm that would otherwise kill you. If he gets you there, then he can shock you out of it, but you can imagine it is a scary test to undergo for the patient. Often the general cardiologist will not even refer the patient to the Electrophysiologist for this invasive test. We have equal or better efficacy than the invasive electrophysiology test, and this has been validated by numerous clinical studies. In addition, there are no other non-invasive tests out there that come anywhere close to our ability to define those individuals. CEOCFOinterviews: It sounds to me that this should be everywhere. Where are you in that process? Mr. Chazanovitz: It would seem to be common sense that it should be used in all cardiology practices on millions of patients. We are at the early stages of market penetration as the technology is new and this requires a great deal of missionary selling right now. Microvolt T-Wave Alternans doesnt have a neat place in the doctors office whereby we are replacing something that they are used to using. It requires a paradigm shift in how cardiologists evaluate their patients, and a paradigm shift in the tools that they use to evaluate their patients. It requires one physician being convinced and helping us convince other physicians, that this test is an important element in their practice. It requires that appropriate reimbursement be in place so that the physicians are adequately reimbursed for what they do. We have excellent reimbursement in place with regards to Medicare reimbursement and our CPT code for the procedure. We are still working at gaining universal reimbursement from all the private carriers. There are always some hurdles whenever you bring a new technology to market. Some of those hurdles we have discovered for the first time and some of the hurdles we already knew were there. We are always trying to figure out the best ways to knock down the brick wall, climb over it or run around it. CEOCFOinterviews: What are you doing to make the medical community aware? Mr. Chazanovitz: It always has to do with the science of the product. There is wonderful science and a substantial amount of patients who have undergone study, and we are working to bring this information to the medical community. We are also working with some of the ICD companies on some additional very large studies out in the marketplace to continue to prove the fact that when the Microvolt T-Wave Alternans Test is negative, you are at minimal risk and when you are positive you are at substantial risk. This concept will be validated through the MASTER Study which we are starting with Medtronic, Inc. and the ABCD Trial which is underway with St. Jude Medical. You need to build a foundation for the medical community that indeed there is science behind the technology. That is what the studies will do. Then you have to find a way to get the word to them. We use a combination of vehicles; the most important of these is our direct sales force. We have a small direct sales force of fifteen people who are trained in the operation of the system and also the understanding the mechanisms of action and how the test is performed, as well as understanding the reimbursement and business pieces of the technology. Without the business piece of it, no matter how good it is scientifically, it would still be a difficult sale. As mentioned we also work very closely with the various ICD companies that are out there, because identifying the people at risk often leads to the implantation of an ICD. CEOCFOinterviews: Currently, how many machines are out on the market? Mr. Chazanovitz: We have a few hundred machines out there right now. They are, in some cases, located in world-renowned hospitals. However, the real value of the test is that it is an everyday test useful within a clinical cardiology practice. We have had numerous clinical cardiology practices that have started to use it with increasing frequency to determine the best way to manage their individual patients. CEOCFOinterviews: How expensive is it for the doctors, and will eventually most of your revenues come from disposables? Mr. Chazanovitz: This is clearly a razor, razor blade sale. We have a piece of capital equipment, which I mentioned, called the Heartwave, which is about the size of a laptop computer. It has a touch screen for the technician to control the conduct of the study. The actual capital equipment is approximately $22,000 and each time a test is performed, we sell a series of our proprietary sensors on a per-patient basis. It costs approximately 85-95 dollars per patient. The actual capital investment is quite modest. The cost per test is also quite modest, especially when you consider that the CPT code for reimbursement of this test is a very attractive $426. The challenge is to get enough equipment in the field, being used frequently enough so that the disposable portion of the business eventually becomes the largest piece of the business. CEOCFOinterviews: Wouldnt it eventually be something that doctors performing annual physicals should have? Mr. Chazanovitz: We would love to get to that point, in time, where this is incorporated into the annual physical. All of the clinical testing that we have done has been done in patient populations that have known cardiac disease. They might be post-myocardial infarction / heart attack patients or patients with heart failure or cardio- myopathy. It could be a condition where you get light-headed or dizzy and faint, or it could be from a potential arrhythmia or bad beat rhythm. We have not tested healthy individuals and followed them in a study environment to see the long-term impact of MTWA. The pool of patients associated with known cardiac diseases includes over ten million people, and frankly all of these patients should be tested on an annual or bi-annual basis. Cardiac disease is very progressive in its nature. Doing a test today does not necessarily mean that the patient will have the same risk profile a one or two years from now. CEOCFOinterviews: Do you address the general public to make them aware of something they should be asking for, or is that down the line? Mr. Chazanovitz: Our efforts now are aimed at gaining penetration into the cardiology community. Once we get a few more steps up the street with regards to penetration, the value of going to the public will be increased substantially. CEOCFOinterviews: Do you do the manufacturing of the sensors yourself? Mr. Chazanovitz: We have an OEM supplier for our sensors. They take our patented design and manufacture the sensors for us. With regard to the hardware, we contract for large sub-assemblies within the Heartwave product, and then do some final assembly here in our facility in Bedford Massachusetts. Additionally, we do the final testing, inspection, packaging and shipment of the devices as well. CEOCFOinterviews: What about the cash and credit position of the company? Mr. Chazanovitz: In 2002 we grew our business by 38%, ending the year at 4.3 million dollars in sales. Possibly more important, we grew our U.S. core business approximately 56%, so we are ramping our Alternans sales. At the end of 2002 we had 3.1 million dollars of cash, burning slightly more than a million dollars per quarter in cash. Recently we announced that we closed on approximately $3.1 million through the sale of Series A Preferred Stock to Medtronic and a group of private investors.. We also have the ability to raise op to an additional $3.4 million from the same group of private investors. CEOCFOinterviews: You mentioned Medicare has accepted your product. Mr. Chazanovitz: Medicare has been very progressive in evaluating the Microvolt T-Wave Alternans Test. We have established a CPT code, which is a unique numerical identifier that is specific to the Microvolt T-Wave Alternans Test. Medicare carriers across the country reimburse the MTWA Test at an average of $426. This amount should create an incentive to the cardiologist perform the test and make use of its clinical value. CEOCFOinterviews: What are your biggest challenges? Mr. Chazanovitz: The biggest challenge is one of penetration. Cardiologists are busy doctors. Those of your readers that read this interview will remember going to the cardiologist and seeing many people in the waiting room. The biggest challenge that we have as a small company is to gain access time with our end-user customer. Once we get that access time we can do a great job of showing them the importance and ease-of-use of our test. The biggest challenge is getting in front of the customer and that is why we actively partner with the large and well respected ICD companies. We go to the national shows, and try and feed the medical literature with information about our product, in the hopes that physicians will continue to read it, call us up and say why dont you come in and spend some time with me. CEOCFOinterviews: In closing, what would you like to say to shareholders and potential investors? Mr. Chazanovitz: Challenging world political conditions have left many potential investors sitting on the sidelines. Fortunately we have a following of committed investors who have once again invested in our viability. All of the fundamentals of our business and product acceptance have never been stronger. We have just had a major presentation at the American College of Cardiology Meeting confirming the efficacy of our product. We have wonderful partnerships in the field with major companies. We are about to start a significant study, the MASTER Study, where the largest of the ICD companies, Medtronic, will introduce us to fifty new accounts enabling us to sell our equipment and get our product used both as part of the study, as well as for clinical use within the cardiac practice. Sometimes when you go to the newspaper and see a depressed stock price, the natural tendency is to say, Whats wrong with this company? as opposed to This is a great opportunity, and something that I should be jumping into right now. Needless to say, we believe that the time is right for Cambridge Heart and that the opportunity is not yet reflected in the share price.
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Bedford, Mass., July 29, 2003 -- Cambridge Heart, Inc. (OTCBB-CAMH) today reported record revenue of $1,627,236 for the quarter ended June 30, 2003. This represents an increase of 55% over revenues of $1,050,735 for the same period in 2002. Net loss attributable to common shareholders for the quarter was $2,566,216, or $0.13 per share, compared to a loss of $1,646,481, or $0.08 per share for the same quarter last year. The reported net loss attributable to common shareholders includes a non-cash financing charge associated with the Companys recently completed Series A Convertible Preferred stock financing of $1,533,280, or $0.08 per share. The Company reported a net loss of $1,032,936, which would have resulted in a loss of $0.05 per share before the financing charge.
Lancet Study Points to Utility of
Microvolt T-Wave Alternans Test in Predicting which MADIT II Type Patients May Not Benefit
from a Defibrillator Implant Growing Body of
Evidence Supports Use of Microvolt T-Wave Alternans Test as Risk Stratification Tool for
Defibrillator Implantation
Bedford, Mass., July 10, 2003 -- Cambridge Heart, Inc. (OTCBB-CAMH) announced today that the results of a study, assessing the utility of Microvolt T-Wave Alternans (MTWA) in predicting risk of sudden death among MADIT II type patients, have been reported in the current issue of The Lancet. The results indicate that the MTWA Test, using the Cambridge Heart proprietary Analytic Spectral Method during exercise stress, identifies which MADIT II type patients are at low risk for sudden cardiac death and therefore may not benefit from implantation of a defibrillator.
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