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New Clinical Study Shows Unprecedented Results of ART MEDICAL’s smART+ Platform, Including Significant Reduction in Length of Stay, Ventilation Days in ICU and Improved Feeding Efficacy

Next-generation critical care nutrition management system reduces length of stay in ICU and length of ventilation by more than three days versus standard of care

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ART MEDICAL, an Israeli medical device company committed to its vision of detecting and preventing intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired complications such as aspiration pneumonia, malnutrition and acute kidney injury, unveiled unprecedented results on the performance of its smART+ Platform in a randomized comparative study published by the European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism’s (ESPEN’s) Clinical Nutrition.

The study demonstrated the smART+ Platform can maximize feeding efficiency, reaching nearly 90% of the targeted nutrition goal and improve patient outcomes by reducing both ICU length of stay and length of ventilation by 3.3 days. This breakthrough is an important step toward the commercialization of ART MEDICAL’s revolutionary technology.

The smART+ Platform is designed to prevent delayed initiation of enteral feeding by assisting with tube positioning, continuously calculating an appropriate energy goal, supporting the physician in selecting the right feeding formula, detecting reflux events in real time and redirecting gastric content, which can cause aspiration, to an evacuation bag. To offset feeding interruptions, the system calculates the resulting deficit and delivers gradual compensation to better reach the prescribed 100% nutritional target.

“When patients do not receive adequate nutrition, it leads to life-threatening complications and a great economic burden,” said professor Pierre Singer, study author, former ESPEN chair and author of the current ESPEN guidelines on clinical nutrition in the ICU. “These results, which demonstrate nearly 90% feeding efficiency, are unparalleled. With the smART+ Platform, we are now able to provide the prescribed and adequate enteral feeding to patients daily, which hasn’t been possible before. I believe this breakthrough technology will profoundly impact the practice of critical care nutrition going forward.”

Two-year results from the smART+ Platform study

Over a two-year period, a clinical study was conducted to assess critically ill patients who were mechanically ventilated and enterally fed. The patients were randomized into two groups: a control group receiving nutrition according to ESPEN guidelines and standard (manual) practice, versus the treated group following the same guidelines but utilizing the smART+ Platform for two to 14 days. Overall, the data demonstrated significant benefits for patients in the group utilizing the smART+ Platform.

Key outcomes

  • Achieved nearly 90% feeding efficiency (delivered nutrition/target nutrition): 89.5% versus 65% in the control group
  • Reduced length of stay in the ICU by an average of 3.3 days: 10.4 days versus 13.7 days in the control group
  • Reduced length of ventilation by an average of 3.3 days: 9.5 days versus 12.8 days in the control group
  • Significantly improved the achievement of daily nutritional targets, with smART+ patients reaching 100% of their daily nutrition target 10 times more often than the control group

ICU-acquired complications related to nutrition pose significant challenges in critical care. The current standard of care relies on manual calculations to determine patient nutritional needs, which can be off by up to 50%.1 Patients are often underfed or overfed (with malnutrition of up to 78%2) — both correlate to increased mortality. In addition, uncontrolled reflux events present a great risk of aspiration and pneumonia.3

Feeding is also frequently interrupted by routine medical procedures, but the necessary nutrition is not compensated. Most ICU patients do not reach 60%4 of nutrition adequacy. Current solutions on the market are not sufficient to address these complex and often linked complications.

Beyond its influence on patient outcomes, the current standard of care also impacts the hospitals’ economic burden. The cost of a ventilated patient in a United States ICU can add up to $10,000 per day. However, U.S. hospitals are not reimbursed for these additional expenses incurred while treating ICU-acquired complications, highlighting the pressing need to find effective ways to mitigate these costs.

“Medical devices in critical care nutrition have had little to no innovation over the last several decades. Nutrition, while considered important, was never directly correlated to ICU length of stay,” said Liron Elia, founder and CEO of ART MEDICAL. “The groundbreaking data of this study puts nutrition management front and center of critical care and proves that malnutrition and aspiration can only be treated holistically and in real time. Our evidence shows that by optimizing nutrition, we can dramatically improve patient outcomes. We are excited to introduce the smART+ Platform to the global market, providing clinicians with a powerful tool to elevate the standard of care in ICUs and help the sickest patients.”

About the smART+ Platform

The smART+ Platform is an ecosystem of software and sensor-based tools designed to detect and reduce the risk of feeding-related complications while achieving optimal feeding efficiency. As it continuously tracks nutrient delivery, smART+ automatically detects any interruption in feeding and automatically compensates to close the nutritional gap — delivering the right amount of nutrition and eliminating the risk of malnutrition. smART+ sensors and monitoring technology also help detect acute kidney injury and potential reflux events, both of which can be life-threatening if not caught early enough.

If a change in feeding tube position is detected, feeding is immediately halted, and the staff is alerted through the interface as well as an audible alert. With the help of the sensors, the clinical staff can effortlessly reposition the tube. smART+ makes repositioning simple and feeding resumes automatically.

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