FDA Panel Backs First Radio-Frequency Asthma Treatment
By wchung | 20 Jun, 2026
Federal health advisers are recommending a novel technology from Asthmatx be approved as the first non-drug treatment for asthma.
The Food and Drug Administration’s panel of respiratory device experts voted 6-1 that Asthmatx’s Alair System be approved under certain conditions, including long-term tracking of patients.
The company’s procedure, called thermoplasty, uses extreme heat to burn away lung tissue that makes it difficult to breath and causes coughing spasms and wheezing. The heat is delivered via a catheter that emits radiofrequency waves, dissolving excess muscle.
While roughly 20 million people in the U.S. suffer from asthma, thermoplasty would only be appropriate for about 2 million adults who don’t get relief from existing drugs.
10/28/2009 5:06 PM WASHINGTON (AP)
Recent Articles
- Italy's Meloni Tells Trump to Focus on His Own Popularity as Row Continues
- Trump Unveils Gifted Qatari 747 As Addition to Air Force One Fleet
- A Warm World Cup Welcome Endears the US to Fans
- China's May Refined Oil Exports Rose from April, Australia Received Agreed Volume
- New Bangladesh Premier to Seek Investments, Jobs in China, Malaysia
- Charles Schwab Working with Cboe to Enter Prediction Market
- Mexico's Love Affair with All Things Korean — Until Thursday's Kickoff
- The Making of a Striking Tiger
- Japan's World Cup Prospects Brighter Than Their Single Group Point Might Suggest
- International Stars in the Red Devils' Lineup Suggests a Deep World Cup Run for S. Korea
