| Literature DB >> 29564151 |
Jeong Hee Lee1, Eung Do Kim1, Eun Jung Jun2, Hyoung Sun Yoo3, Joon Woo Lee3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this paper is to provide technology trends and information regarding market and prospects in stents used for human blood vessels in Korea and the world.A stent is a medical device in the form of a cylindrical metal net used to normalize flow when blood or other bodily fluids such as biliary fluids are obstructed in blood vessels, gastrointestinal tracts, etc. by inserting the stent into a narrowed or clogged area. Stents are classified into vascular and non-vascular stents. The coronary artery stent is avascular stent that is used for coronary atherosclerosis.The demand is increasing for stents to treat diseases such as those affecting the heart and blood vessels of elderly and middle-aged patients. Due to the current shift in the demographic structure caused by an aging society, the prospect for stents seems to be very bright.The use of a stent designed to prevent acute vascular occlusion and restenosis, which is a side effect of conventional balloon angioplasty, has rapidly become popular because it can prevent acute complications and improve clinical outcomes. Since the initial release of this stent, there have been significant developments in its design, the most notable of which has been the introduction of drug-eluting stents (DES). Bioresorbable scaffolds (BRS) have the potential to introduce a paradigm shift in interventional cardiology, a true anatomical and functional "vascular restoration" instead of an artificial stiff tube encased by a persistent metallic foreign body.Entities:
Keywords: Bioresorbable scaffolds (BRS); Coronary artery stent; Drug-eluting stents (DES); Implantable medical devices; Market analysis; Restenosis; Vascular occlusion; Vascular stent
Year: 2018 PMID: 29564151 PMCID: PMC5851094 DOI: 10.1186/s40824-018-0114-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomater Res ISSN: 1226-4601
Fig. 1Classification of stents [17, 22]
Status of major global applications related to stents [15]
| Applicant | US applications | Japan applications | Europe applications | Total | Technological focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abbott Cardiovascular Systems | 232 | 11 | 22 | 265 | Stent, biocompatible polyacrylate composition |
| Cook Medical Technologies | 77 | 22 | 32 | 111 | Stent graft, prosthesis |
| Boston Scientific Scimed | 77 | 22 | 32 | 111 | Drug release stent, shape memory polymer stent |
| Smith & Nephew | 38 | 8 | 0 | 47 | Bioabsorbable polymer, composition for tissue regeneration |
| Advanced Cardiovascular Systems | 48 | 0 | 0 | 48 | Drug Delivery Device Coating |
Developed metallic DES with durable polymers for coronary arteries [17]
| Stent | Manufacturer | Drug (Dose: μg/mm2) | Polymer | Polymer Thickness | Stent Platform | Strut |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cypher | Cordls Corporation | Sirolimus (1.4) | PEVA+PBMA | 12.6 | SS | 140 |
| Cypher select | Cordls Corporation | Sirolimus | PEVA+PBMA | N/A | SS | 100 |
| Elixir Myolimus | Elixir Medical | Myolimus (40 μg) | Methacrylate | < 3 | CoCr | N/A |
| Endeavor | Medtronic, Inc. | Zotarolimus (10) | Phosphorylcholine | 5.3 | CoCr | 91 |
| Excella | Elixir Medical Corporation | Novolimus (0.85) | Methacrylate | 3 | CoCr | 81 |
| Promus | Boston Scientific Corporation | Everolimus (1) | Fluoropolymer | 7.6 | CoCr | 81 |
| Taxus Express | Boston Scientific Corporation | Paclitaxel (1) | SIBS (Translute) | 16 | SS | 132 |
| Taxus Liberte | Boston Scientific Corporation | Paclitaxel (1) | SIBS (Translute) | 16 | SS | 97 |
| Taxus Petal | Boston Scientific Corporation | Paclitaxel | SIBS (Translute) | N/A | Platinum Chromium | N/A |
| Xience V | Abbott Vascular | Everolimus (1) | Fluoropolymer | 7.6 | CoCr | 81 |
| ZoMaxx | Abbott Vascular | Zotarolimus (10) | Phosphorylcholine | 5 | SS/Tantalum | 74 |
SS Stainless steel and CoCr Cobalt chromium
Developed DES with biodegradable polymers for coronary arteries [17]
| Stent | Manufacturer | Drug (Dose) | Polymer | Polymer Thickness | Stent platform | Strut |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Axxess | Devax.Inc | Biolimus A-9 (15.6 μg/mm) | PLA | N/A | SS | 112 |
| BioMatrix | Biosensors International.ltd. | Biolimus-A9 (15.6 μg/mm) | PLA | 10 | SS | 137 |
| Cardiomind | CardioMind, Inc. | Sirolimus (5.2 μg/mm) | PLA + PGLA | N/A | Nitinol | 61 |
| Champion | Boston Scientific Corporation | Everolimus | PLA | N/A | SS | N/A |
| Corio | Cordis Corporation | Pimecrolimus | N/A | N/A | CoCr | 89 |
| CoStar | Cordis Corporation | Paclitaxel | PLGA | N/A | CoCr | 89 |
| Cura | OrbusNeich | Sirolimus (1.7 μg/mm2) | PLA + PLGA | 5–10 | SS | 100 |
| Excel | JW Medical Systems Ltd. | Sirolimus (195–376 μg) | PLA | N/A | SS | 150 |
| Infinnium | Sahajanand Medical Technologies Pvt.Ltd. | Paclitaxel | PLL + PLGA+PVP | N/A | SS | 84 |
| Nevo | Cordis Corporation | Sirolimus (166 μg) | PLGA | N/A | CoCr | 99 |
| Nobori | Terumo Medical corporation | Biolimus A-9 | PLA | N/A | SS | 120–149 |
| Stellium | DISA Vascular (Pty) Ltd. | Paclitaxel | PLGA | N/A | CoCr | N/A |
| Supralimus | Sahajanand Medical Technologies Pvt.Ltd. | Sirolimus (1.4 μg/mm2) | PLLA+PLGA+PVP | N/A | SS | 80 |
| Symbio | Cordis Corporation | Pimecrolimus + Paclitaxel | PLGA | N/A | CoCr | 89 |
| Synchronnium | Sahajanand Medical Technologies Pvt.Ltd. | Sirolimus + Heparin | N/A | 5–6 | SS | 60 |
| Xtent | Xtent. Inc. | Biolimus A-9 | PLA | N/A | CoCr | N/A |
SS Stainless steel and CoCr Cobalt chromium
Mechanical and physical properties of biodegradable polymers [20]
| Polymer | Tg | Tm | Modulus (GPa) | Strength (MPa) | Elongation at break (%) | Degradation (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA | 60 | 180–190 | 2–4 | 65 | 2–6 | 18–30 |
| PDLLA | 55 | Amorph. | 1–3.5 | 40 | 1–2 | 3–4 |
| PLLA | 60–65 | 175 | 2–4 | 60–70 | 2–6 | > 24 |
| PDLGA (50/50) | 45 | Amorph. | 1–4.3 | 45 | 1–4 | 1–2 |
| PLGA (82/12) | 50 | 135–145 | 3.3–3.5 | 65 | 2–6 | 12–18 |
| PCL | − 54 | 55–60 | 0.34–0.36 | 23 | > 4000 | 24–36 |
| PLA/PCL (70/30) | 20 | 100–125 | 0.02–0.04 | 2–4.5 | > 100 | 12–24 |
| WE43 (Mg alloy) | N.A | 540–640 | 40–50 | 220–330 | 2–20 | ~ 12 |
| SS 316 L | N.A | 1371–1399 | 193 | 668 | 40 | Biostable |
| CoCr | N.A | ~ 1454 | 210–235 | > 1000 | 40 | Biostable |
PLA Polylactic acid, PDLLA Poly-DL-lactic acid, PLLA Poly-L-lactic acid, PDLGA Poly-DL-lactide-co-glycolide, PLGA Poly-lactic-co glycolide, PCL Polycaprolactone, PLA/PCL Polylactic acid/polycaprolactone, Mg Magnesium, SS Stainless steel, and CoCr Cobalt chromium
Summarized highlights of current BRS technologies [20]
| Company | Stent name | Strut backbone material | Strut thickness | Key method | Radiopacity | Drug-eluting Property |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abbott | Absorb BVS | PLLA | 150 (BVS), 100 (Next gen) | Blow molding process and orientation (stretching) | 2 platinum radiopaque markers | Everolimus |
| Amaranth | Fortitude, Aptitude | PLLA | 150, 120 | Dip coating to induce linear/radial orientation | N/A | Sirolimus |
| ART | ART18Z | PDLLA | 170 (1st gen), 140–150 (2nd gen) | Annealing | N/A | None (1st gen), Sirolimus (2nd gen) |
| Arterius | ArterioSorb | PLLA | 140–100 | Die drawing to induce orientation and alignment | Radiopaque markers | Sirolimus |
| Elixir | DeSolve | PLLA | 150 (1st gen), 120 (2nd gen) | Annealing and quenching | Metallic markers | Novolimus |
| REVA medical Xenogenics | Fantom Ideal BioStent | Tyrosine PC, PAE salicylic acid | 125, 175 | Proprietary polymer | Iodine incorporated into the polymer or N/A | Sirolimus or Sirolimus + Salicylic acid |
| Envision Scientific | BIOLUTE-next | Mg alloy | 120 | Bio-corrodible metal and polymer coating | Radiopaque markers | Sirolimus |
BVS Bioresorbable vascular scaffold, PLLA Poly-L-lactic acid, PDLLA Poly-DL-lactic acid, PC Polycarbonate, PAE Poly(anhydride-ester), Mg Magnesium, and IBS Iron-based bioresorbable scaffold
Global market forecast for vascular stents (2016–2020) [Unit: million USD] [11]
| Classification | Subclass | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | CAGR(%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary Artery Stents | Bare Metal Stents | 508 | 490 | 472 | 456 | 445 | −3.3% |
| Bioresorbable Stents | 205 | 221 | 240 | 262 | 287 | 8.8% | |
| Covered Stents | 140 | 141 | 144 | 147 | 152 | 2.1% | |
| Drug Eluting Stents | 4658 | 4757 | 4891 | 5067 | 5282 | 3.2% | |
| Sum | 5371 | 5468 | 5604 | 5785 | 6014 | 2.9% | |
| Neurovascular Stents | Neurovascular Stents | 141 | 150 | 160 | 171 | 182 | 6.7% |
| Peripheral Vascular | Fem-pop Artery Stents | 498 | 533 | 577 | 617 | 659 | 7.3% |
| Iliac Artery Stents | 833 | 889 | 963 | 1026 | 1094 | 7.1% | |
| Infrapop Artery Stents | 176 | 188 | 204 | 217 | 225 | 6.3% | |
| Total | 1507 | 1611 | 1744 | 1861 | 1979 | 7.0% |
Current sizes and forecasts of the market for coronary artery stents by continent (2016–2023) [Unit: million USD [11]
| Continent | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | CAGR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asia-Pacific | 2715 | 2926 | 3169 | 3448 | 3771 | 4143 | 4574 | 5072 | 9.3% |
| Europe | 917 | 888 | 861 | 836 | 810 | 786 | 765 | 740 | −3.0% |
| Middle East and Africa | 65 | 64 | 63 | 63 | 62 | 61 | 60 | 58 | −1.7% |
| South and Central America | 115 | 118 | 122 | 126 | 130 | 134 | 138 | 142 | 3.1% |
| North America | 1559 | 1471 | 1389 | 1312 | 1241 | 1175 | 1114 | 1057 | −5.4% |
| Global | 5371 | 5468 | 5604 | 5785 | 6014 | 6300 | 6651 | 7068 | 4.0% |
Global stent pipelines for coronary arteries under development [11]
| Classification | Bare Metal Stents | Drug Eluting Stents | Bioresorbable Stents | Coronary Artery Stents |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early development | 0 | 6 | 6 | 7 |
| Pre-Clinical | 0 | 7 | 5 | 1 |
| Clinical | 9 | 25 | 11 | 3 |
| In Approval Process | 2 | 4 | 3 | 2 |
| Sum | 11 | 42 | 25 | 13 |
Size and forecast of the Korean market for vessel stents (2015–2020) [Unit: million Korean won] [1]
| 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | CAGR (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 116,237 | 115,282 | 114,335 | 113,397 | 112,465 | 111,542 | −0.8 |
Stent related companies in Korea and overseas and their core technologies [1]
| Company | Main Technology |
|---|---|
| Johnson & Johnson (MD&D) | Orthopedic (spine, etc.) implants, minimally invasive surgical instruments, wound sutures, contact lenses, blood glucose meters, catheters, stents, etc. |
| Medtronic, Inc. | Defibrillator, pacemaker, stent, catheter, spine regeneration, bone graft material, etc. |
| Covidien plc (MD) | Laparoscopic, surgical stapler, electrosurgical instruments, stents and orthopedic supplies |
| Boston Scientific Corporation | Access devices, balloon dilators, catheters, stents, slings |
| Abbott Vascular Inc | Vessel closure, structural heart, humanitarian use devices, peripheral intervention |
| Biotronik | Cardiac rhythm management, peripheral vascular intervention |
| REVA | Medical unique bioresorbable polymers |
| Zorion Medical | ZMED devices (biodegradable stent) |
| S3V Vascular Technologies | Cardio vascular, critical care |
| Japan Stent Technology | Biodegradable stents |
| OrbusNeich | Dual therapy stents, bio-engineered stents, bare metal stents, semi-compliant balloons, non-compliant balloons, specialty balloons |
| Taewoong Medical | Non-vessel stents (gastroenterology, urology, pulmonary, general surgery, cardiology) |
| MITECH CORPORATION | Stents, GI accessories |
| Sewoon Medical | Non-vessel stents |