Abigail Klein Leichman
While powerful chemotherapy drugs can save
patients’ lives, exposure to vapors, residues and needle jabs from
these toxic pharmaceuticals is linked to an increased risk of skin
rashes, infertility, birth defects and even cancer for the millions of
medical professionals who prepare, dispense and administer them.
That’s
why about 20 percent of US healthcare workers are now using
“closed-system” drug transfer devices on the recommendation of the
Centers for Disease Control and Protection (CDC).
As demand is
expected to rise — the chemotherapy market is currently the fastest
growing in the pharmaceutical industry — Israeli company Equashield stepped into the field in 2010 with what it claims to be a uniquely affordable, regulation-compliant and safe solution.
The
company’s products, which are FDA and CE cleared for the United States
and Europe, are currently used in hundreds of hospitals and clinics.
User-friendly, foolproof
Marketing and sales manager
Adi Shahar tells ISRAEL21c that existing closed-system (or
semi-closed-system) devices generally depend on a filter or balloon
mechanism to equalize the pressure in the vial. However, they are
complicated to use and not fully protective for worker or patient,
because they cannot stop all drug vapors from escaping or because they
can’t keep contamination from ambient air entering the vial.
“A
typical chemotherapy session requires the transfer of a cytotoxin from a
vial to a syringe, and then again to the infusion bag,” Shahar
explains. “The pressure disparity during drug transfer expels vapors,
droplets and aerosols into the work environment, and is considered as
one of the main routes of exposure.”
Equashield’s founders devised
a user-friendly, foolproof alternative using a tight-seal double
membrane to prevent vapors from escaping and to keep the vial sterile.
Shahar says this closed system is the only one that is fully compliant
with regulatory guidelines in the United States as well as other
countries.
Since it was introduced, Equashield has captured half
of the leading competitor’s customer base and added many new users. The
privately held company had a 60 percent year-over-year increase in sales
in 2013 and began turning a profit.
Equashield II on its way
With
its headquarters and factory in the Tefen industrial park in northern
Israel, Equashield is sold worldwide through a New York sales office and
a network of distributors. The company has 180 employees, 85% of them
in Tefen.
Shahar explains that the company grew out of another Tefen-based firm, Plastmed, which supplied fluid-transfer devices to Johnson & Johnson.
In 2007, Plastmed’s owners Meron Mann, Marino Kriheli and Eric Shem-Tov
were seeking their own product and learned about the shortcomings of
existing closed-system drug transfer devices and the growing need for
better alternatives.
Once they perfected their design idea in 2010, they brought prototypes to healthcare facilities.
“The
plan was to go to big hospitals in the chemo area to start clinical
studies with their product and maybe combine their knowledge, but as
soon as users saw the system they said, ‘Bring it on, forget about
studies.’ That’s how it started. And now we are in hundreds of hospitals
in the US,” says Shahar.
“A distributor in Europe started working
with us, and in one year we won sales at 15 hospitals. Companies are
coming to us from all over the globe – we have distributors in Asia,
Australia and New Zealand. In Israel, we have 60 percent of the market.”
The company is now working toward the launch of its next generation product, Equashield II.
“What
distinguishes our company is high-tech,” says Shahar. “We’re always
working toward our goal to be the best closed system ever. We published
new studies about how Equashield completely eliminates surface
contamination, while our competitors could only show reduction, not
elimination. We are also introducing more automation in our factory to
become more efficient in the manufacturing process.”
For more information, see www.equashield.com.
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