Health

FDA Approves Bumetanide Nasal Spray for Edema in Heart, Liver, and Kidney Disease

By Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli

Copyright medicaldialogues

FDA Approves Bumetanide Nasal Spray  for Edema in Heart, Liver, and Kidney Disease

The FDA has approved Enbumyst (bumetanide nasal spray) for treating edema linked to congestive heart failure, liver disease, and kidney disease, Corstasis Therapeutics announced.Addressing a Critical Unmet NeedEdema and fluid overload remain the leading causes of hospitalization and readmission for patients with CHF, cirrhosis, and chronic kidney disease. An estimated 6.7 million Americans live with heart failure, and fluid overload drives over 1 million hospitalizations annually, accounting for billions of dollars in U.S. health care expenditures. Oral loop diuretics can be limited by poor gastrointestinal absorption and delayed onset, while intravenous (IV) therapy requires a hospital or infusion setting, often associated with higher resource utilization and increased healthcare expenditure.ENBUMYST demonstrated rapid absorption and predictable diuretic response in clinical studies, with a similar effect on diuresis, natriuresis and urinary potassium excretion when compared to IV bumetanide injection. ENBUMYST adds a new self-administered outpatient diuretic therapy, which may help bridge the gap between oral and IV diuretics for treating edema in patients with CHF, liver disease and kidney disease. The FDA-approved Prescribing Information for ENBUMYST does not include a boxed warning. Please refer to the Important Safety Information below.“The FDA approval of ENBUMYST represents a meaningful advancement in the treatment of edema for patients and providers,” said Ben Esque, Chief Executive Officer of Corstasis Therapeutics.“ENBUMYST was designed in direct collaboration with cardiologists to address practical challenges in the outpatient care setting,” said Dr. Brian Kolski Chief Medical Director of Corstasis and Director, Non-Invasive Vascular Lab at the Orange County Heart Institute and Director of Structural Heart Disease at Providence St Joseph Hospital in Orange, California.Commercial Strategy and Market OpportunityCorstasis expects to launch ENBUMYST in the U.S. in the fourth quarter of 2025, targeting cardiologists, nephrologists, hepatologists, outpatient heart failure clinics and integrated delivery networks (IDNs). The company is also preparing a robust market access strategy, including real-world outcomes data and payer partnerships, to support rapid adoption and coverage.The U.S. market for outpatient diuretic therapies addressing edema associated with CHF, and hepatic and renal disease is estimated to represent a multi-billion-dollar opportunity annually, driven by the high prevalence of heart failure and chronic kidney disease, as well as the unmet need for therapies that reduce costly hospitalizations and readmissions.“ENBUMYST offers the potential to change the standard of care by enabling earlier, outpatient intervention,” said Dr. Anuradha Lala-Trindade, Director of Heart Failure Research at the Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital in New York. “This innovation may meaningfully improve outcomes while potentially easing the economic burden on the healthcare system.”