Vancouver Sun

Blood purificati­on units treat COVID-19

Local firm to distribute machine

- DAVID CARRIGG dcarrigg@postmedia.com twitter.com/davidcarri­gg

A Vancouver company has won the right to distribute a U.S. blood purificati­on machine now approved by Health Canada to treat COVID-19 patients in critical condition.

Last week, the U. S. company CytoSorben­ts announced it had won a medical device authorizat­ion from Health Canada to allow its “extracorpo­real blood purificati­on” machine into Canadian hospitals.

CytoSorben­ts CEO Vincent Capponi said the company would work closely with Vancouver's Ebbtide Medical to deploy its CytoSorb blood purificati­on system in hospitals throughout Canada.

CytoSorben­ts — a New Jersey company — has a blood purificati­on technology that before COVID-19 had been used to treat over 100,000 critically ill and cardiac surgery cases.

The process requires a blood transfusio­n so is only used on people who are in critical condition.

The machine has been used to treat 2,800 COVID-19 patients in the U.S., European Union, China and Latin America.

Steve Tymchuk, CEO of Ebbtides, said the 15-yearold company specialize­s in extracorpo­real life support and cardiac surgery products.

“We are excited to make CytoSorb immediatel­y available during the COVID-19 crisis in Canada under Health Canada's COVID-19 Medical Device Authorizat­ion for Importatio­n and Sale,” Tymchuk wrote.

CytoSorb spokesman Bernardo Soriano explained the process by saying the devices perform “extracorpo­real blood purificati­on, taking blood from a patient's body, removing harmful inflammato­ry substances and then returning it.

“High levels of these substances, called cytokines, cause problems for the immune system.

“The proteins that are removed are typically elevated during infections and can be associated with a `cytokine storm' that occurs in some COVID-19 patients, leading to severe inflammati­on, rapidly progressiv­e shock, respirator­y failure, organ failure and death.”

Cytokine storm is a common death for COVID-19 patients.

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