Creo Medical Group plc
("Creo" the
"Company" or the "Group")
NHS Supply Chain real-world data
demonstrates substantial cash savings and operational benefits from
Speedboat Submucosal Dissection (SSD) procedures
Case study by an NHS Trust sets out the
cash savings and operational benefits gained from the use of Creo's
Speedboat technology for bowel SSD procedures, in addition to life
changing clinical outcomes for patients
Creo Medical Group plc (AIM: CREO),
the medical device company focused on the emerging field of
minimally invasive surgical endoscopy, announces that NHS Supply
Chain data demonstrates significant cost and operational savings
provided by the use of Creo's Speedboat technology in Speedboat
Submucosal Dissection ("SSD") procedures. This is in addition to
life changing patient outcomes previously identified by the Company
and the ability to positively impact NHS waiting lists.
By analysing 130 SSD patient
procedures undertaken at East Kent University Hospitals Foundation
Trust ("EKHUFT") as part of their bowel cancer and therapeutic
endoscopy service, and comparing against a similar analysis of
surgical alternatives, the data confirmed includes:
·
87% reduction in the average length of
stay from 8.39 days to 1.07 days;
·
99% reduction in critical care costs;
·
91% reduction in accommodation costs per patient
from £3.4k to £0.3k;
·
62% reduction in admission costs from £8.2k to
£3.1k;
·
Over a 1-year period, costs were reduced from
£8.8k to £3.6k (59% reduction);
·
Theatre procedure cost reduced from £4.5k to £2.8k
(38% reduction);
·
Net cash savings from just these 130 patient
procedures of £687k realised for the NHS Trust.
The net cash savings referenced were
calculated over a one-year period and relate only to the SSD
procedure element, and do not include additional benefits and costs
savings previously identified and reported by the Company utilising
the lifetime horizon Markov model, which included downstream costs
associated with recurrence of lesions and procedure-related
complications commonly associated with surgical alternatives to
SSD.
NHS Supply Chain manages the
sourcing, delivery and supply of healthcare products, services and
food for NHS Trusts and healthcare organisations across England and
Wales. Against the backdrop of ever increasing demands on the NHS
and finite financial and operational resources, NHS Supply Chain
has embarked on a value based procurement project to work with
industry to consider technologies that can influence a reduction in
total costs within the patient pathway.
Working with EKHUFT, NHS Supply Chain's Value
Based Procurement team's case study found that: "the use of SSD, when compared to surgical
alternatives, results in a less invasive procedure for patients
whilst maintaining an en-bloc resection with clear margins. The
endoscopic nature of the procedure and Speedboat's advanced energy
modalities makes this procedure both safe and effective whilst
simultaneously reducing time spent in hospital and providing cost
benefits in terms of the material and resourcing costs associated
with each procedure."
It continued:
"Using
financial modelling on the data generated, EKHUFT has been able to
evidence that the adoption of this novel technology and its
implementation as part of a new service has resulted in significant
savings for the Trust. The detailed dataset will also enable
statistical analysis and health economics evaluations to be
successfully undertaken with confidence."
The data is the first like-for-like,
real-world comparative health economic data provided on the service
facilitated by Creo's Speedboat technology. It has been calculated
using official NHS data with the analysis conducted using NHS
England 'Approved Costing Guidance', recognised by all NHS Trusts
in addition to industry bodies and includes a breakdown of all
comparators, from theatre time to accommodation cost. The data and
associated benefits have been captured as part of an official NHS
Supply Chain case study promoting innovative technology and how
technology can drive NHS savings.
The full case study and a breakdown
of results will be published on the NHS Supply Chain website, and
NHS Supply Chain will actively work to promote the value
proposition of Creo's Speedboat technology by engaging directly
with financial controllers and decision makers at NHS Trusts around
the country. The case study will also be shared with the Department
of Health and Social Care, NICE and others to illustrate the scope
and speed of impact Creo's Speedboat technology can have, not only
on patients and clinicians but on healthcare providers.
Creo has previously received a
series of awards from the National Institute for Health and Care
Research (NIHR) Invention for
Innovation (i4i) Programme to
support certain development projects, including the development of
Speedboat, which targets innovative technology, with a clear path
to commercialisation, that can improve patient outcomes and
simultaneously reduce cost. This latest published data from NHS
Supply Chain not only reinforces NIHR's investment decision to
support Creo in the development of its Speedboat technology, but
clearly illustrates how such investment benefits patients,
healthcare providers and the NHS by enabling the development of
solutions to address existing and/or emerging health or social care
needs.
Craig Gulliford, Chief Executive
Officer of Creo Medical, said: "For NHS
Supply Chain to recognise Creo's Speedboat technology as one of
just a handful of cutting-edge technologies from so many
indications across the NHS is great recognition in itself. The
clinical data clearly demonstrates the level of value Speedboat can
bring to the NHS and its patients, in-line with our own previous
estimates, which is both gratifying and hugely
significant.
"With this data, no longer based on
modelling, but gained by looking at every aspect of a comprehensive
data set of real cases, we look forward to working closely with NHS
Supply Chain to ensure that the successes seen in East Kent
University Hospitals with Speedboat are replicated in healthcare
settings across the UK. This will enable us to continue to impact
on patients and also reducing waiting lists significantly with the
level of efficiency improvements this data
demonstrates."
Sandra Owen, Clinical Engagement
& Implementation Manager at NHS Supply Chain, said:
"NHS
Supply Chain is working on a project designed to consider the
potential benefits and practical application of Value Based
Procurement (VBP). Here, there is
a shift in emphasis from a reduction in product costs to
working with industry to consider technologies that can influence
a reduction in total costs within the patient pathway, and
Speedboat is a good example of this."
Elisa
Llewellyn, Director of Commissioning, Contracting and Costing at
EKUFT, said: "The introduction of
this service at East Kent and the pathway it facilitates have
immediately had a positive impact not only in terms of patient
outcomes but also from a value perspective. With over 200 Speedboat
Submucosal Dissection cases now completed at East Kent, our
in-depth costing work clearly shows tangible and consistent
financial benefits largely stemming from a reduction in the time
patients are spending in hospital as a result of our ability to
re-direct patients from surgical waiting lists to our excellent
endoscopy unit."
Enquiries:
Creo Medical
Group plc
|
www.creomedical.com
|
Richard Rees (CFO)
|
+44 (0)1291 606
005
|
|
|
Cavendish
Capital Markets Limited
|
+44 (0)20 7397
8900
|
Stephen Keys / Camilla Hume (NOMAD)
|
|
Michael Johnson (Sales)
|
|
|
|
Deutsche Numis
(Joint Broker)
Freddie Barnfield / Duncan Monteith / Euan
Brown
|
+44 (0)20
7260 1000
|
|
|
Walbrook
PR
|
Tel: +44
(0)20 7933 8780 or
creo@walbrookpr.com
|
Paul McManus / Sam Allen
Phillip Marriage
|
Mob: +44
(0)7980 541 893 / +44 (0)7502 558 258
+44
(0)7867 984 082
|
About Creo
Medical
Creo Medical is a medical device company
focused on the development and commercialisation of minimally
invasive electrosurgical devices, bringing advanced energy to
endoscopy.
The Company's vision is to improve patient
outcomes through the development and commercialisation of a suite
of electrosurgical medical devices, each enabled by CROMA, powered
by Kamaptive. The Group has developed the CROMA powered by
Kamaptive full-spectrum adaptive technology to optimise surgical
capability and patient outcomes. Kamaptive is a seamless, intuitive
integration of multi-modal energy sources, optimised to dynamically
adapt to patient tissue during procedures such as resection,
dissection, coagulation and ablation of tissue. Kamaptive
technology provides clinicians with increased flexibility,
precision and controlled surgical solutions. CROMA currently
delivers bipolar radiofrequency ("RF") energy for precise localised
cutting and focused high frequency microwave ("MW") energy for
controlled coagulation and ablation via a single accessory port.
This technology, combined with the Group's range of patented
electrosurgical devices, is designed to provide clinicians with
flexible, accurate and controlled clinical solutions. The Directors
believe the Company's technology can impact the landscape of
surgery and endoscopy by providing a safer, less-invasive and more
cost-efficient option for procedures.
For more information, please refer to the
website www.creomedical.com