Medtronic achieves CE Mark approval for BrainSense™ Adaptive deep brain stimulation and Electrode Identifier, a groundbreaking advance in personalized, sensing-enabled care for people with Parkinson's through innovative brain-computer interface technology

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European approval introduces the world's only closed-loop DBS system with real-time, self-adjusting brain stimulation for people with Parkinson's disease

GALWAY, Ireland, Jan. 13, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Medtronic plc (NYSE:MDT), a global leader in healthcare technology, announced today CE (Conformité Européenne) Mark approval in the European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom (UK) for BrainSense™ Adaptive deep brain stimulation (aDBS) and BrainSense™ Electrode Identifier (EI), having achieved the standards required by the EU Medical Device Regulation (MDR). In addition, the first programming was completed today, performed by Martijn Beudel, MD, PhD, neurologist and associate professor, Department of Neurology, Amsterdam University Medical Center. This landmark approval and first-in-Europe patient programming demonstrate significant advancements in personalized DBS therapy for people with Parkinson's in Europe, including the UK.

For 30 years, people with Parkinson's disease have benefitted from deep brain stimulation (DBS), a technology that transmits electric signals to the brain to disrupt certain unwanted movement. With BrainSense™ aDBS, people with Parkinson's disease can now benefit from real-time, adaptive therapy that dynamically adjusts stimulation based on each person's unique brain activity, both in clinical settings and daily life1. BrainSense™ Electrode Identifier can improve DBS programming by ensuring optimal initial contact selection in less time2.

Caregivers and healthcare providers alike intimately understand how disruptive Parkinson's can be on one's daily life. Affecting over 1.2 million patients in Europe alone and more than 10 million people worldwide, Parkinson's is known to impact an individual's mobility, speech, focus, sleep, independence, and overall ability to participate fully in work, family, and social life. From sipping a cup of coffee to holding hands with a loved one, the disease can be debilitating and demoralizing, stripping away what many of us take for granted. For spouses and caregivers, this can be immensely demanding and distressing3,4.

"BrainSense™ technology is at the center of personalizing DBS therapy, and we are advancing this capability through innovation that builds on our sensing-enabled DBS platform," said Paolo Di Vincenzo, president of the Neuromodulation business, which is part of the Neuroscience Portfolio at Medtronic. "From improved precision for contact selection to automatically adjusting DBS therapy, these milestones mark significant advancements in our ability to customize care for people with Parkinson's, and we're just getting started. The mission is to impact and improve many more lives with Medtronic DBS therapy."