In today’s society, 3 in every 5 adults attending primary healthcare facilities do so because they suffer chronic pain. This demand surpasses the visits registered together for cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases, putting all players of the healthcare system under an unnerving pressure. Because of its economic impact (around €300 Billion/year in the EU only) chronic pain is considered one of the healthcare priorities worldwide.
Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) is the most effective drug-free way to treat chronic pain. However, the SCS solutions currently available either require expensive, complex and invasive surgeries, or feature limited reliability and low effectiveness.
SCS is applied by means of implanting an implantable pulse generator (IPG) and placing a set of electrodes (leads) into the epidural space. The leads currently available on the market are of two kinds: Multicolumn Paddle Leads, that are inserted via an invasive surgical procedure, and Cylindrical Leads, that can be implanted percutaneously. Neither option represents the ideal lead, with either holding several pitfalls:
• Multicolumn Paddle Leads allow very effective, directional and spatially controlled stimulation, but their placing requires expensive and invasive surgery, and their removal is very complicated.
• Percutaneous Cylindrical Leads can be implanted through a needle with a minimally invasive surgery and can be removed more easily than the paddles, however:
o they do not allow directional stimulation, causing stimulation-evoked discomfort to patients and higher battery consumption, with possible need to replace the IPG.
o they do not allow spatially controlled stimulation, resulting in less effective treatment.
o they show higher lead migration or displacement rates, causing higher reoperation rates in the medium and in the long term to replace the damaged or ineffective devices.
The challenge is to give both practitioners and patients a new generation of SCS leads, that combine the best features of today's available products. The production of a lead with these features is possible only with our patented SCBI technology allowing to produce leads that are extremely thin, flexible and stretchable. The PercPad project will provide an entirely new type of implantable leads, the SCS Heron LeadTM: the first SCS multicolumn paddle lead for chronic pain therapy that can be implanted percutaneously.