• Corporate Programs
  • Gift Cards
  • Advertise
  • People
  • Lists
  • Jobs
  • Classifieds
  • Public Notices
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
  • Contact Us
Indianapolis Business Journal
Subscribe Now Log In
Indianapolis Business Journal
  • Newsletters
  • Podcast
  • Weekly Paper
  • Advertise
  • People
  • Lists
  • Jobs
  • Classifieds
  • Public Notices
  • News
    • Weekly Paper
      • Digital Edition
      • Purchase Past Issues
    • Diversity
    • Sports Business
    • Small Business
    • Banking & Finance
    • Regional
      • Boone County
      • Hamilton County
      • Hancock County
      • Hendricks County
      • Johnson County
      • Madison County
      • Morgan County
      • Shelby County
      • Other Counties
    • More Industries
      • Communications
      • Education & Workforce Development
      • Energy & Environment
      • Government & Economic Development
      • Law
      • Manufacturing
      • Philanthropy
      • Transportation, Distribution & Logistics
      • Workplace Issues
    • Company News
      • Eli Lilly and Co.
      • Simon Property Group
      • Elevance
      • More Public Companies
      • More Private Companies
    • Corrections
    • Multimedia
      • Photo Galleries
      • Videos
      • IBJ mobile apps
      • RSS Feeds
  • Real Estate
    • Retail
    • Restaurants
    • Commercial
    • Residential
  • Politics
  • North of 96th
  • Health Care
  • Tech
  • Opinion
    • Forefront
    • Viewpoint
    • Editorials
    • Letters to the Editor
  • Events
    • 20 in Their Twenties
      • 2025 Honorees
      • 2025 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for event
    • Bourbon & Brokers
    • CEO of the Year & C-Suite Awards
    • Commercial Real Estate & Construction Power Breakfast
    • Economic Forecast
    • Education Power Breakfast
    • Fast 25
      • 2025 Honorees
      • 2024 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for Event
    • Forty Under 40
      • 2025 Honorees
      • 2023 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for Event
    • Gleaners – Hunger & Health
    • Health Care & Benefits Power Breakfast
    • Excellence in Health Care
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • 2026 Honorees
      • 2024 Event Video
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for Event
    • Indiana 250
      • 2022 Photo Gallery
      • Indiana 250 Website
    • Innovate Indiana Series
      • Innovate Southwest Indiana – Evansville
      • Innovate East Central – Muncie
      • Innovate Northeast Indiana – Fort Wayne
    • Leadership in Law
    • Life Sciences Power Breakfast
    • Nonprofit Excellence Awards
      • 2025 Honorees
    • Technology Power Breakfast
    • Women of Influence
      • 2025 Honorees
      • 2024 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for event
  • Awards
    • Submit Award Nominations
    • Award Recipients
      • 20 in their Twenties
      • CEO of the Year and C-Suite Awards
        • Past Recipients
        • 2025 Honorees
      • Fast25
      • Excellence in Health Care
        • Past Recipients
        • 2026 Honorees
        • Nominations
      • HR Impact Awards
      • Michael A. Carroll Award
      • Nonprofit Excellence Awards
      • Women of Influence
        • 2024 Honorees
        • Past Recipients
      • Forty Under 40
        • Class of 2025
        • Past Recipients
      • Tech Exec of the Year
        • 2024 Honorees
        • Past Recipients
  • Content Studio
    • Thought Leadership
      • Bringing a personal touch to financial planning
      • A prescription for better health
      • Small and mid-sized firms shouldn’t take cybersecurity risks lightly
      • It’s time to take a scalpel to the business school
      • Advancing access, affordability, and workforce readiness
      • Addressing Indiana’s workforce transformation needs
      • Rethinking Risk: How Climate Change is Reshaping Insurance
      • Pacers Foundation, Gleaners team up to feed hungry Hoosiers
      • Howard Bailey Financial® Vice President Marshal Johnson on Helping You “Retire With Purpose”
      • Educators preparing for new diploma standards
      • Innovation is a mindset that must be taught
      • What to consider before selling your business
      • Q&A: STATE OF WOMEN IN CENTRAL INDIANA REPORT
      • Cracking the Glass Ceiling is Not Enough: New Women’s Executive Leadership Institute Brings Sisterhood Approach to Progress
      • Integrating AI
      • Thinking of selling your business? Here’s what you need to know
      • Indiana State University focuses on workforce readiness
      • Putting students on the best career path
      • CareSource provides resources and programs to make Indiana healthier
      • Housing market on the mend
      • Cybersecurity requires savvy, vigilance
      • Kelley School of Business Indianapolis is building a robust and reliable talent pipeline
      • How mission-driven work helps retain and attract top talent
      • Innovation & Workforce
      • Talent & Workforce
      • Talent for today—and tomorrow
      • Transparency can be transformational
      • Process improvement and its impact on healthcare delivery
      • Overcoming barriers for patients and providers
      • Shaping the disruptors: How Purdue’s MBT program sets a new standard
      • Group 1001 bringing innovation to financial services
      • Bringing technological advancements to life
      • Clearing the path to rewarding employment
      • The Tragedy of the Phone-Based Childhood is an Urgent Call We Must Answer
      • Addressing laboratory staffing shortages is critical for healthcare’s future
      • Business Succession Planning Q&A
      • Designing a benefits plan that works
      • Pandemic brought changes that are here to stay
      • Help students make the connection between learning and work
    • Thought Leadership Topics
    • Sponsored Content
      • Addressing Indiana’s Healthcare Affordability Crisis
      • FirstNet: A Public-Private Partnership That Keeps America Safe
      • Make IT the Secret Weapon for Your Small Business
      • Automation can enhance client interactions
      • Loren Wood Builders: Crafting Legacy Projects Across Indiana
      • To drive government efficiency, connected technology is a must
      • INNOVATIVE – TRANSFORMATIVE – RAW AWE!
      • Where are they now: Rolls-Royce
      • Where are they now: LER TechForce
      • Where are they now: Micropulse
      • Future-ready HR: The versatility of full-service PEO partnerships
      • Where are they now: Meats by Linz
      • Where are they now: Liberation Labs
      • Where are they now: Doral Renewables/Mammoth Solar
      • Where are they now: Corteva Agriscience
      • Busey Bank Continues to Grow in Indiana, Adds Stutsman to Local Leadership Team
      • Competitive Advantages of Conscious Capitalism
      • Mohr Logistics Park: Transforming The Indianapolis Industrial Landscape
      • Empowering American Cities: Local Economic Intelligence, Trusted Advice
      • 2024 Indiana Global Economic Summit is key to building state’s economy of the future
      • When the Business of Your Business Becomes Your Wealth
      • Balancing Cost and Quality with Price Transparency Tools
      • Navigating Opportunities in Indianapolis Despite Economic Uncertainty
      • Superior Dental Care brings its highly regarded dental plans to the entire state of Indiana
    • Sponsored Content Samples
      • Sponsored Content – Emails
      • Sponsored Content – Print
      • Custom Videos
    • Business Cares Sites
      • Business Cares: Corporate Social Responsibility
      • Business Cares Breast Cancer Awareness
      • Business Cares Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
      • Business Cares Heart Health Awareness
    • Career Ready Indiana
      • 2025-26 – Earn & Learn
      • 2024-25 – Build Your Talent Pipeline
      • 2024-25 – Build Your Job Skills
      • 2023-24 – Need Talent? Grow Your Own
      • 2022-23 – Looking for Talent? Employers, We’ve Got You Covered!
      • 2021-22 – Hoosiers Talk About Why Indiana is a Great Place for Your Career
      • 2020-21 – Today’s College Students Older, Wiser
      • 2019-20 – Former Indy 500 Driver Crosses College Finish Line
    • Contact Us
Subscribe Now Log In
  • Weekly Paper
  • The IBJ Podcast
  • Pete the Planner podcast
  • Latest IBJ Forefront
  • Executive Gift Guide
  • AI Issue
  • Arts & Entertainment Preview
Home » Search

Search Results

9 results for 'cook zilver stent'

  • Sort By
    • Relevance
    • Oldest
    • Newest
  • Date
    • Any Time
    • Past Day
    • Past Week
    • Past Month
    • Past Year
    • Custom Date Range
  • Content Type
    • {{post_type.label}}
  • Topics
  • Authors
  • Reset

Articles

Company news

August 12, 2013

Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co., already the promoter of the leading anti-impotence pill Cialis, will now try to speed up development of a drug to treat premature ejaculation. Canada-based TVM Life Sciences Ventures VII, which manages funds supplied by Lilly, invested in Ixchelsis Ltd., a new company created in the United Kingdom to develop the experimental drug, which is called IX-01. The drug was originally discovered at a research facility in the United Kingdom operated by New York-based Pfizer Inc., the company that brought the anti-impotence pill Viagra to market. Lilly’s Chorus unit will oversee development of the drug to determine if its proposed concept of action appears to work. “TVM’s strategic relationship with Lilly enables its project-focused companies, like Ixchelsis, to reach clinical proof of concept efficiently and cost-effectively,” said Darren Carroll, Lilly’s vice president of corporate business development, in a prepared statement. If and when the drug’s proof-of-concept is verified, Lilly will have the option to acquire the drug for further development. Lilly and TVM estimate that as many as 30 percent of men worldwide suffer from premature ejaculation.

Warsaw-based Zimmer Holdings Inc., which lost a February trial against Stryker Corp. over a surgical device, was told to pay more than $228 million—three times the jury award plus other costs—and stop selling certain products. According to Bloomberg News, the increase in the jury award was appropriate because Zimmer intentionally infringed Stryker patents to build its business for pulsed lavage, a technique that removes damaged tissue and cleans bones during joint-replacement surgery, U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker said in an order issued Wednesday. He also ordered Zimmer to stop selling its Pulsavac Plus device. A federal jury in Grand Rapids, Mich., in February sided with Stryker and awarded $70 million in damages. The dispute is over devices that use pulsing liquid, such as water or saline solution, to loosen debris from a surgical site and remove it by suction. The $228 million figure is more than the second-quarter profit for either company. Kalamazoo, Mich.-based Stryker reported $213 million in earnings on sales of $2.2 billion. Zimmer, based in Warsaw, reported $152 million in earnings on $1.2 billion in sales.

Three months after the recall of its Zilver PTX stent to prop open peripheral arteries, Bloomington-based Cook Medical Inc. put the device back on the market around the globe, according to MassDevice.com, an industry trade publication. Cook voluntarily recalled the stents in April after getting reports of one patient death and one injury when the equipment that delivers the stent into patients broke off during surgery. In late May, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration slapped its “deadly” warning on Cook’s recall of its stent, which props open arteries in the legs and arms to prevent serious blood clots. Millenium Research Group has estimated that Cook derives $2,750 from each Zilver stent it sells in the United States. Since it first hit foreign markets in 2009, the Zilver stent has been deployed in more than 30,000 patients, according to data from Cook. The Zilver, which is the first stent covered with an inflammation-reducing drug, was introduced to the U.S. market in December 2012. The Zilver recall did not affect stents that were already placed in patients.
 

Good news, bad news for Cook stent business

June 10, 2013

While Bloomington-based medical-device maker won approval for new bile duct stent, it has recalled its hot-selling arterial stent from all global markets.

Cook wins approval for new stent

November 19, 2012

Bloomington-based Cook Medical won approval for the first drug-coated stent for clogged leg arteries in the United States, which accounts for 40 percent of the soon-to-be $3 billion market.

Company news

October 17, 2011

Franciscan St. Francis Health entered an exclusive-provider agreement with Greenwood-based Indiana Internal Medicine Consultants, one of the largest physician groups working at Franciscan’s hospitals. The practice has 37 doctors specializing in family practice, internal medicine, infectious disease and sleep medicine. The tighter relationship, which took effect Oct. 1, is designed to help Franciscan function as an accountable care organization. That concept, promoted in the 2010 health reform law, calls for hospitals and doctors to work together to care for a specific population of patients—and have some of their pay hinge on how well they maintain the health of that population. Hospitals around Indianapolis and the nation have been acquiring physician practices or entering tight contractual relationships, such as Franciscan’s exclusive-provider agreement, which will not allow Indiana Internal Medicine’s doctors to practice at hospitals outside the Franciscan chain. Franciscan operates hospitals in Beech Grove, Indianapolis and Mooresville.

The pain isn’t ending for the Warsaw-based makers of orthopedic implants. Democrats from the House Energy and Commerce Committee have asked Republican leaders to hold hearings on metal-on-metal hips, saying they have caused "significant harm to human health". The FDA is conducting its own review of metal-on-metal, having requested post-market data from about 20 companies, including Warsaw-based DePuy Orthopaedics, Zimmer and Biomet, as well as New Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson.

Bloomington-based Cook Medical Inc.’s drug-coated stent to treat blocked femoral arteries is sailing toward approval. The Zilver PTX got an 11-0 approval vote from a panel of outside advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, according to Bloomberg News. The FDA does not have to follow the recommendations of its advisory panels, but it usually does. The device would be the first drug-coated stent approved in the U.S. to treat peripheral vascular disease in the largest artery of the upper leg. It would be an alternative to bypass surgery, angioplasty or the use of a stent without a coating of a drug, paclitaxel, which is designed to reduce the build-up of new fatty deposits. Peripheral arterial disease affects 8 million to 12 million people in the U.S., according to the Peripheral Arterial Disease Coalition, and can lead to heart attacks and strokes.

Cook Medical gets FDA panel’s backing for stent

October 14, 2011

The device would be the first drug-coated stent approved in the U.S. to treat peripheral vascular disease in the largest artery of the upper leg.

FDA: Cook Medical’s stent met efficacy, safety goals

October 11, 2011

Peripheral vascular devices, including stents, angioplasty balloons and synthetic grafts, generated $4.3 billion in global revenue last year and may earn $5.6 billion in 2014.

Cook stent could prevent more amputations, study finds

September 28, 2010

A drug-coated stent from Indiana-based Cook Medical was more effective than standard therapy for patients with blockages in an upper-leg artery, a study found.

Cook predicts blockbuster with new stent

August 24, 2009

Bloomington-based Cook Medical has won European approval for a new artery-opening device for the legs that it predicts will
be a blockbuster.

Cook treading into new territory: Bloomington medical firm makes move toward untapped stent market

April 11, 2005

Cook Inc. plans to slide its coated-stent ambitions from the heart down to another region of the body where a multimillion-dollar market awaits. The Bloomington-based medical-device maker recently started testing a product that uses the same drug Cook put on a coronary stent it tried to develop a couple of years ago with Guidant Corp. Instead of treating arteries near the heart, the Zilver PTX stent targets blockages in the major artery that runs through the thigh. Cook is the…

Back To Top
  • Subscriptions
    • Online & Print Subscriptions
    • FREE eNews
  • Submit to Edit
    • Submit People
    • Submit Records
    • IBJ Awards
  • IBJ.com Account
    • My Account
    • Register
  • Events
    • Upcoming IBJ Events
    • Award Nominations
    • Event Sponsorship Opportunities
  • Support & Information
    • Customer Service
    • Contact Us
    • Career Opportunities
    • Reprints
  • Advertising
    • IBJ Advertising
    • Contacts
    • Classifieds
    • Legal Notices
    • Submit Advertising
  • Multimedia
    • Photo Galleries
    • Videos
    • IBJ Mobile App
  • IBJ.com
    • Book of Lists
    • Editorial Calendar
    • Archives
    • IBJ Digital Newspaper
    • Past Print Issues
    • Magazines/Supplements
    • IBJ Store
  • Online Products
    • Purchase Past Issues
    • Bookstore
  • IBJ Media
  • Inside INdiana Business
  • The Indiana Lawyer
  • Indiana 250
  • AdEndeavor
Copyright © 2026 All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy | Terms of Service