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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11055/1351
Title: Early Outcomes with a Flexible ECAP Based Closed Loop Using Multiplexed Spinal Cord Stimulation Waveforms-Single-arm Study with In-clinic Randomized Crossover Testing.
Authors: Mohabbati V 
Sullivan R 
Yu J
Georgius P 
Brooker CD
Siorek M
McClelland NL
Coletti F
Sun X
Franke A
Russo M 
Keywords: Spinal cord stimulation systems
Issue Date: May-2025
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) systems that deliver fixed amplitudes expose target tissue to varying electrical fields due to the changing lead-to-cord distance accompanying postural shifts and other body movements. Inconsistent stimulation results in periods of overstimulation or under-stimulation perceived by patients as discomfort or potentially inadequate pain relief. CL-SCS may be applied to provide a comfortable level of perception down to imperceptible stimulation, commonly preferred in higher frequency and multiplexed programming. Here we report outcomes from a study evaluating a closed-loop (CL) SCS system that uses spinal evoked compound action potentials to adjust stimulation. METHODS: This ongoing study combines the evaluation of pain-related outcomes (for <=24 months) with in-clinic randomized, crossover testing of CL performance. RESULTS: Sixty subjects have been implanted with the CL-SCS system and 54 subjects have completed the 3-month visit. Sixty percent preferred below-perception waveforms for therapy during at-home use. The study successfully met its primary endpoint with 89.3% of subjects in the Primary Analysis Set (n = 28) reporting reduction in overstimulation with CL-SCS relative to OL-SCS at 1-month (p < 0.001; binomial exact test); at 3-months, 86% of subjects with low-back/leg pain (n = 51) and all three with upper limb pain reported >=50% reduction in pain, relative to baseline. CONCLUSIONS: The data presented here support the performance of a flexible CL-SCS system that can deliver a variety of waveforms, with amplitude programmed to patient comfort and automatically adjusted up to 50 times per second, to improve the consistency of therapy experience. Copyright © The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11055/1351
ISSN: 1526-2375
Appears in Collections:Scholarly and Clinical

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