π¨ BREAKING: Company That Funded Study Delighted To Report Study Found In Their Favor π¨
Peer-Reviewed* By Shareholders
Company That Designed, Funded, Ran, Analyzed, And Wrote Study Thrilled To Report Study Shows Their Product Works
Nature Medicine publishes findings from researchers whose stock options vest upon FDA approval
By Staff | January 3, 2026 | We have no financial stake in neck implants
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Artist's rendering of a patient receiving the breakthrough treatment. The device requires weekly charging via a neck-worn collar, like a very expensive, very internal Fitbit.
VALENCIA, CA β In a development that has shocked absolutely no one familiar with medical device funding, SetPoint Medical announced this week that a study designed by SetPoint Medical, funded by SetPoint Medical, conducted by SetPoint Medical, analyzed by SetPoint Medical, and written by SetPoint Medical employees who own SetPoint Medical stock has conclusively determined that SetPoint Medical's product is safe and effective.
The study, published in the journal Nature Medicineβwhich apparently now accepts elaborately formatted press releases as peer-reviewed scienceβfound that implanting electrodes on patients' vagus nerves and zapping them with electricity while they sleep produced results described as "statistically significant" in the same way a coin landing heads 53% of the time is "statistically significant."
"We are thrilled to report that our device works," said Dr. David Chernoff, the study's corresponding author, SetPoint Medical employee, and holder of stock options that will vest if the FDA approves the device he just declared safe and effective. "And I want to be clear: my financial interest in reaching this conclusion did not influence my completely objective analysis of data my company collected about my company's product."
"24% of patients improved from fake surgery. We're claiming credit for the other 11%."
The trial's mathematics tell a compelling story. Of patients who received active treatment, 35.2% showed improvement. Of patients who received sham treatmentβthe exact same surgery, but with the device set to 0 milliampsβ24.2% also improved. The company is seeking FDA approval based on the 11 percentage points they claim credit for, while hoping regulators don't ask why nearly a quarter of patients got better from completely fake surgery.
"The 24% placebo response is actually encouraging," explained a spokesperson, visibly perspiring. "It proves the surgery itself has therapeutic value. The belief that someone installed something in your neck is almost as effective as actually installing something. We're choosing to view this as a feature, not a bug."
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"Because you tried to cure arthritis with electricity"
The enrolled patients had already failed an average of 2.6 prior medications. Forty-three percent were classified as "difficult-to-treat"βmedicine's euphemism for "we've exhausted our options." These patients chose experimental neck surgery over trying drug number four. The paper calls this "strong patient preference for nonpharmacologic treatment options." It might also be called desperation.
Side effects were described as "mild to moderate" and included vocal cord paralysis in 4.5% of patientsβtreated by injecting filler into the affected cord. Some patients required a year of voice therapy to relearn how to speak. The paper notes these effects "resolved," without specifying that "resolved" sometimes meant "the patient eventually adjusted to their new voice."
In one notable incident, a patient who decided the device wasn't working requested removal. During explantation, the surgeon caused a "pharyngeal perforation"βpuncturing the patient's throat. The paper states this was "immediately repaired," which the company insists is the relevant detail, rather than the fact that a hole was accidentally made in someone's pharynx during an elective procedure.
β‘ VAGUS NERVE OPERATION β‘
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β οΈ Possible Complications
β Vocal Cord Paralysis
β Dysphonia
β Pharyngeal Perforation
β "Perceived Lack of Benefit"
β Patient Requests Removal
β Hoarseness (Permanent)
The conflicts of interest section reads like a pharmaceutical industry directory. Twenty-five authors disclosed ties to 63 different companies. Lead author Dr. John Tesser alone lists relationships with seventeen corporations. Multiple authors are SetPoint employees holding "equity/stock options and intellectual property/patents"βmeaning they profit directly if the device they evaluated gets approved.
Patient satisfaction was reported at 78%. Critics note that measuring satisfaction among people who've undergone irreversible neck surgery may not be entirely objective. "Of course they're satisfied," observed one analyst. "What are they going to sayβ'I had neck surgery for nothing'? That's not satisfaction. That's sunk cost fallacy with sutures."
"My ownership of patents on this technology had zero influence on my scientific conclusions." β Study author who owns patents on this technology
The device requires weekly maintenance via a "wireless charging device worn around the neck." Patients' immune systems now run on firmware. The company has not announced whether the charger will be available in designer colors or if users can expect push notifications about their inflammatory reflex.
As of press time, SetPoint's stock had risen 847%, the FDA was "reviewing" the data, and approximately 24% of patients continued improving from absolutely nothing at all.
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Why pay for electricity when belief works just as well? Our 24%-effective sham surgery delivers real results through the power of medical theater.
"Incision. Beep boop. Close incision. You're cured."
I was in this study. Still can't tell if I got the real treatment or the sham. My arthritis is exactly the same but I have a cool scar and my neck buzzes sometimes. 3/5 stars.
π 4.2Kπ 23Reply
SetPoint_PRSTOCKHOLDER1 hour ago
Hi VagusVince42! We're sorry to hear this. Our data shows you should feel 11% better than control. Please contact support so we can explain why you're experiencing your symptoms incorrectly.
π 8π 6.7KReply
DrSkeptical_PhD3 hours ago
I've reviewed clinical trials for 30 years. Never seen a more elegant example of regulatory capture. The fox designed the henhouse, built it, inspected it, and wrote the report declaring it fox-proof. Then a prestigious journal published it. Just magnificent.
π 18.9Kπ 45Reply
PlaceboEnjoyer2 hours ago
The real story: FAKE SURGERY has a 24% success rate. Just make an incision, say "installing now," close the wound. A quarter of patients improve. That's incredible. Can we study that? Oh wait, you can't patent belief.
π 9.1Kπ 67Reply
BigPharmaChad1 hour ago
Trust me, we looked into patenting "beep boop." Lawyers said no.
π 5.4Kπ 12Reply
ThroatPerforationGuy1 hour ago
I was the pharyngeal perforation. AMA.
π 22.3Kπ 5Reply
Curious_Carl50 min ago
Wait they actually poked a hole in your throat?
π 567Reply
ThroatPerforationGuy48 min ago
It was "immediately repaired" so technically no big deal. The paper says "resolved without clinically significant sequelae." My lived experience of having my pharynx perforated is not statistically significant.
π 15.8Kπ 2Reply
StockBro4201 hour ago
Bought STPT at $2 now at $19 πππ Thanks for your necks, arthritis patients! Diamond hands! ππ
π 34π 41.2KReply
Moderator_KarenRATIO'D55 min ago
Sir, this is a medical journal.
π 38.7Kπ 4Reply
VocalCordSupportGroup45 min ago
*tries to comment* *cannot speak* *types instead* The filler in my vocal cord is settling nicely. I sound like a jazz singer now. An unwilling jazz singer. With arthritis. That hasn't improved.
π 7.8Kπ 9Reply
DefinitelyNotAnEmployee30 min ago
This is GROUNDBREAKING science! Everyone should get this implant! I am a normal person with no connection to this company. My username is coincidental. BUY STPT. This is not financial advice but also it is.
π 7π 28.9KReply
first_commenter_19874 hours ago
First!
π 1π 2.3KReply
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