Being transaction-ready when consumers unlock a health system's digital front door

Being transaction-ready when consumers unlock a health system's digital front door
View As Webpage

Leverage data for better healthcare outcomes. >>
 
HIMSS
 
 

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

 
 
Novartis, Propeller product photo

Novartis, Propeller Health co-package new asthma treatment

By Laura Lovett

Novartis and respiratory health company Propeller Health, a ResMed subsidiary, have teamed up to co-package the latter’s digital health platform with the pharma giant’s new asthma medication Enerzair Breezhaler. 

This news come shortly after the product landed European Commission clearance. The co-packaged product will be launching in the EU during 2020. However, it is not yet available in the U.S. 

“I think today’s news is an important one, because I think it’s the first time we’ve ever seen a respiratory medicine be co-packaged and be available for co-prescription alongside a tool like Propeller, a digital health platform,” David Van Sickle, cofounder and CEO of Propeller Health, told MobiHealthNews. “We believe, and have for a while, that this is going to make it easier for patients and their physicians to benefit from digital health and improve their treatment plan. It’s really an important day for us, because we believe it is going accelerate the adoption of digital respiratory health in Europe and help spur other innovative approaches to combining medicines plus digital across the industry.” 

Propeller’s sensor is able to attach to the Enerzair Breezhaler inhaler, where it can collect medication data and send that information to a corresponding app. The tool works both as an adherence measure that gives the patient reminders to take their medication, and as a means of collecting information about the patient’s condition. 

Van Sickle noted that, historically, patients were responsible for recording their own symptoms and exacerbations – which can be difficult to remember over a long period of time. He pitches the tech as a way for patients to keep track better. 

“What digital can do is provide a vital sign that is more objective and timelier. A patient and physician together can better understand whether treatments really control symptoms,” he said. “But with Propeller they are able to get real-time data about the burden of that disease, and that is essentially a marker for how well they are doing – if they are using too much of a [quick relief inhaler] and they need a control medication added, or they need a higher dose of it, or have another thing going on. It opens up a whole new prospective panel of patients and can help providers identify who needs more attention.”

WHY IT MATTERS 

Asthma is a common condition and impacts 7.7% of U.S. adults and 7.5% of children in the country, according to the CDC. Doctors may prescribe a combination of quick -relief inhalers and long-term-control medication, according to the Mayo Clinic. 

Novartis and Propeller are pitching this new co-packaged product as a way to help manage the symptoms of the disease.  

“Historically the majority of people who have had asthma have not had their symptoms under control,” Van Sickle said, “I mean, given that we have great medicine and all that we’ve learned about the disease. It’s really been a frustrating gap, and we should have been able to help people control these diseases much more than we have as a population.”

THE LARGER TREND 

Propeller and Novartis have a long history. In 2017, the two announced a collaboration to develop a custom add-on sensor for Novartis’ Breezhaler inhaler, which is used for Novartis’s portfolio of COPD treatments.

Propeller is no stranger to the pharma space. In May it announced that its sensor and app landed FDA 510(K) clearance for use with AstraZeneca’s Symbicort inhaler for asthma and COPD. It has previously made deals with Boehringer Ingelheim and GSK, and has been used in a number of  clinical trials.

Novartis has a history of working with digital health companies. Perhaps most notable was its relationship with digital therapeutic Pear. Novartis’ Sandoz was working with the startup to commercialize its FDA-cleared addiction-focused products reSET and reSET-O. Last fall, the pharma giant announced that it was handing sole responsibility of the commercialization back to Pear

 The two initially inked a deal to develop two digital therapeutics for multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia. When the commercialization agreement fell apart, that deal was not mentioned, so it could still be on the table.

Man talking on phone with head implant

Cochlear receives FDA clearance for three new hearing devices >>

By Mallory Hackett

Cochlear Limited announced yesterday the U.S. Food and Drug Administration clearance of three new products to be added to the company’s suite of hearing technology devices, all of which can connect to smartphones.

The Premarket Approval clearances went to the Kanso 2 Sound Processor, the Nucleus 7 Sound Processor for Nucleus 22 Implant recipients and the Custom Sound Pro fitting software. The new products will be commercially available in the U.S. and Canada later this year, according to the company.

The Kanso 2 Sound Processor is an off-the-ear cochlear implant that is compatible with Apple and Android devices, as well as the Nucleus Smart App. With the app, users can control their device and receive hearing information. 

The Nucleus 22 is now compatible with the Nucleus 7, meaning that Nucleus 22 implant recipients can upgrade to the newer behind-the-ear sound processor which has smartphone connectivity. Now, people with a Nucleus 22 implant will be able to connect the device to their smartphone.

Cochlear has also released Custom Sound Pro fitting software for clinicians supporting Nucleus implants. The software includes a patient dashboard and goal-setting feature to promote engagement between appointments. 

WHY IT MATTERS

About 13% of people over the age of 12 in the U.S. have hearing loss in both ears, according to the National Institutes of Health

Since the FDA first approved cochlear implants in the mid-1980s, about 58,000 devices have been implanted in adults and 38,000 in children, according to the NIH.

The devices are designed for children and adults who are deaf or severely hard-of-hearing. Although it doesn’t restore hearing, it can give a “useful representation of sounds” to help people understand speech, according to the NIH. 

As this technology has been developed over the last 40 years, more and more implant recipients have improved their ability to hear. 

THE LARGER TREND

Cochlear has been working on integrating its technology into smartphones in recent years. 

In 2017, the Nucleus 7 Sound Processor became the first cochlear implant sound solution made specifically for use with iPhones, iPods and iPads. 

Then last year, the company teamed up with Google to connect the Nucleus 7 to Android devices.

ON THE RECORD

“Cochlear continues to develop and introduce products to support the best lifelong hearing experience for our recipients and their care team,” said Tony Manna, the president of Cochlear Americas, in a statement. “Our new technology can better meet the individual needs and lifestyles of our recipients and is the result of persistent efforts to improve hearing outcomes.”

 

ADVERTISEMENT

The College of St. Scholastica

FUNDING & IPOS

Rock Health reports record digital health funding of $5.4B set to the backdrop of a pandemic

Telehealth and digital behavioral health were two of the most popular investment areas.

 

REGULATION

RapidAI snags FDA clearance for neuroimaging analysis device

It uses machine learning to help physicians detect brain injuries and decide if a patient is eligible for a thrombectomy.

 

FUNDING & IPOS

FraudScope secures $7M in funding

The AI platform detects fraud, waste and abuse schemes attacking health systems, which have become more common during the pandemic.

 

INNOVATION

Elucid Digital Health’s dashboard gives pharma and CROs real-time patient data

Elucid’s Pill connect dispensing system will provide CROs and pharma the ability to show adherence data during a clinical trial, across country, site, and individual patient number.

 

CONSUMERIZATION OF HEALTHCARE

How healthy are health apps?

Digital health applications are starting to make their way into regular healthcare. But how should they be regulated? HTA is increasingly recognized as an important pillar on the way towards universal reimbursement.

 

HIMSS TV

Being transaction-ready when consumers unlock a health system's digital front door

Erin Jospe, MD, chief medical officer at Kyruus, and AVIA VP Sonia Singh say the front door needs to be easy to open and extend beyond the system's website to search engines and guided interactions like text and chat.

 

HIMSS INSIGHTS

COVID-19 and Beyond

The latest issue in the HIMSS Insights series focuses on the implications of the coronavirus crisis for healthcare and healthcare digitization. Several months into the crisis at the time of publication, we try to identify major trends coming out of COVID-19 and unmet digital needs that are being unmasked. The second area of focus is digital health technology assessment which is arising in several healthcare systems and remains highly relevant during the pandemic and beyond.

 

ADVERTISEMENT

HIMSS Analytics
 

Real-time analytics, during the pandemic and beyond >>

PUTTING DATA TO WORK

This month, we look at the lasting lessons from the COVID-19 crisis about how data is exchanged, how it's managed, how it's visualized, how it's put to work informing patient care decisions and population health.

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn

MobiHealthNews & HIMSS Media.
Editorial Inquiries | Advertising | Privacy Policy | Unsubscribe

33 West Monroe Street, Suite 1700, Chicago, IL 60603-5616