Stentys hires Christophe Lottin as CEO

Stentys announced on July 4 that it had hired Christophe Lottin as CEO.

Lottin is a salesman and executive with more than 20 years experience in cardiology at Boston Scientific and Hexacath France. He will take over for Gonzague Issenmann during the next quarter. Issenmann and Jacques Séguin founded Stentys in 2006 to develop stents to treat acute MI.

In 2010, Stentys received a CE marking for its self-apposing BMS and DES(P) stents. The company has also received a CE mark for the Stentys aspiration catheter and the MiStent SES coronary drug-eluting stent.

The FDA has not yet approved any of Stentys’s products. However, the company announced in October 2012 that the FDA had granted an investigational device exemption to conduct a trial evaluating the Stentys self-apposing stent.

In October 2015, Stentys presented results of a trial examining its seroliums-eluting, self-apposing coronary stent at the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics conference in San Francisco. The researchers randomized patients to receive the Stentys stent or Medtronic’s Resolute stent.

Three years after patients received the Stentys stent to treat STEMI, the mean in-stent late lumen loss was 0.08 mm, the rate of well-apposed struts was 99.3 percent and the rate of strut covered by tissue was 99.7 percent.

Stentys's headquarters are in Paris. The company also has offices in nine other countries, including a U.S. site in Princeton, N.J.

Tim Casey,

Executive Editor

Tim Casey joined TriMed Media Group in 2015 as Executive Editor. For the previous four years, he worked as an editor and writer for HMP Communications, primarily focused on covering managed care issues and reporting from medical and health care conferences. He was also a staff reporter at the Sacramento Bee for more than four years covering professional, college and high school sports. He earned his undergraduate degree in psychology from the University of Notre Dame and his MBA degree from Georgetown University.

Around the web

Ron Blankstein, MD, professor of radiology, Harvard Medical School, explains the use of artificial intelligence to detect heart disease in non-cardiac CT exams.

Eleven medical societies have signed on to a consensus statement aimed at standardizing imaging for suspected cardiovascular infections.

Kate Hanneman, MD, explains why many vendors and hospitals want to lower radiology's impact on the environment. "Taking steps to reduce the carbon footprint in healthcare isn’t just an opportunity," she said. "It’s also a responsibility."