Boston acquires remaining shares of Farapulse

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Boston Scientific has exercised its option to acquire the remaining shares of Farapulse. The acquisition will complement the existing Boston Scientific electrophysiology portfolio to include the Farapulse Pulsed Field Ablation (PFA) system—a non-thermal ablation system for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF) and other cardiac arrhythmias. 

“The emerging field of PFA has the potential to alter the future of ablation therapy and has shown the promise of improvements in both safety of cardiac ablations for patients and efficiency and ease-of-use of these procedures for physicians,” said Kenneth Stein, senior vice president and chief medical officer, Rhythm Management and Global Health Policy, Boston Scientific. “The Farapulse PFA System is intended to enable physicians to precisely ablate cardiac tissue while minimising procedural complications, and real-world and clinical evidence from trials throughout Europe have demonstrated encouraging, positive results.”

Boston Scientific has been an investor in Farapulse since 2014 and currently holds an equity stake of approximately 27%. As a result, the transaction consists of an upfront payment of approximately US$295 million for the 73% stake not yet owned, up to US$92 million upon achievement of certain clinical and regulatory milestones as well as additional revenue-based payments for the next three years.

“The more than US$6 billion electrophysiology market continues to expand, growing double digits year-over-year, and adding this technology to our existing portfolio enables Boston Scientific to be the only company to offer physicians comprehensive therapeutic options they can select based on clinical preference and individualised patient needs,” said Scott Olson, senior vice president and president, Rhythm Management, Boston Scientific.

Farapulse became the first company to commercialise a cardiac PFA technology after receiving CE mark for the FARAPULSE PFA System in Europe in the first quarter of 2021. The company also initiated its pivotal IDE trial in the USA—the ADVENT trial—in March 2021. All trial sites have been identified and more than 100 patients have been enrolled to date in the prospective, randomised trial. The study is comparing the Farapulse PFA System to standard-of-care ablation in patients with paroxysmal—or intermittent—AF with a primary endpoint of freedom from AF at 12 months after a single ablation procedure.

“We are encouraged by the positive reception to the commercial launch of the Farapulse PFA system in Europe, which we believe underscores the demand for a simpler way to treat AF,” said Allan Zingeler, president and chief executive officer, Farapulse. “The strength and breadth of the Boston Scientific team will position this breakthrough technology for success and accelerate progress towards regulatory approval in the USA.”


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