| Literature DB >> 30203125 |
Setareh Borhani1, Shadi Hassanajili2, Seyed Hossein Ahmadi Tafti3, Shahram Rabbani3.
Abstract
Compared to bare-metal stents (BMSs), drug-eluting stents (DESs) have been regarded as a revolutionary change in coronary artery diseases (CADs). Releasing pharmaceutical agents from the stent surface was a promising progress in the realm of cardiovascular stents. Despite supreme advantages over BMSs, in-stent restenosis (ISR) and long-term safety of DESs are still deemed ongoing concerns over clinically application of DESs. The failure of DESs for long-term clinical use is associated with following factors including permanent polymeric coating materials, metallic stent platforms, non-optimal drug releasing condition, and factors that have recently been supposed as contributory factors such as degradation products of polymers, metal ions due to erosion and degradation of metals and their alloys utilizing in some stents as metal frameworks. Discovering the direct relation between stent materials and associating adverse effects is a complicated process, and yet it has not been resolved. For clinical success it is of significant importance to optimize DES design and explore novel strategies to overcome all problems including inflammatory response, delay endothelialization, and sub-acute stent thrombosis (ST) simultaneously. In this work, scientific reports are reviewed particularly focusing on recent advancements in DES design which covers both potential improvements of existing and recently novel prototype stent fabrications. Covering a wide range of information from the BMSs to recent advancement, this study mostly sheds light on DES's concepts, namely stent composition, drug release mechanism, and coating techniques. This review further reports different forms of DES including fully biodegradable DESs, shape-memory ones, and polymer-free DESs.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular stents; Coronary artery diseases; In-stent restenosis; Stent thrombosis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30203125 PMCID: PMC6173682 DOI: 10.1007/s40204-018-0097-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Biomater ISSN: 2194-0517
Drug-eluting stents with biodegradable polymer coating
| Stent | Manufacturer | Stent material | Polymer | Coating method | Drug | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | BioMatrix | Biosensors | Stainless steel | PLA | Abluminal: Biolimus A9 + PLA | Biolimus A9 | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 2 | eucaTAX | Eucatech | Stainless steel | PLGA | – | Paclitaxel | Grabo et al. ( |
| 3 | Infinnium | Sahajanand | Stainless steel | PDLLA-co-PGA, PNVP, PLLA-co-PCL | The drug is coated in 3 different layers of combination of drug and polymer, and each layer has a different release profile. | Paclitaxel | Garg and Serruys ( |
| 4 | Luc-Chopin | Balton | Stainless steel | PLGA | Palitaxel + PLGA | Paclitaxel | Graboet al. ( |
| 5 | Nobori | Terumo | Stainless steel | PLA | Abluminal: Biolimus A9 + PLA | Biolimus A9 | Garg and Serruys ( |
| 6 | JACTAX | Boston Scientific | Stainless steel | PLA | Abluminal (have 2750 discrete microdot): paclitaxel + PLA | Paclitaxel | Garg and Serruys ( |
| 7 | Sparrow | CardioMind | Nitinol | PLLA, PLGA, PLC, PVP | Sirolimus drug + polymer matrix | Sirolimus | Garg and Serruys ( |
| 8 | Supralimus | Sahajanand | Stainless steel | PLLA, PLGA, PLC, PVP | The layer: sirolimus + PLLA, PLGA, PLC; the outer: PVP | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 9 | BioMime | Meril Life Science | Co-Cr | PLLA + PLGA | – | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 10 | Excel | JW Medical System | Stainless steel | PLA | Abluminal: sirolimus + PLA | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 11 | Axxess | Biosensors Europe SA | Stainless steel | PLA | Abluminal: Biolimus A9 + PLA | Biolimus A9 | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 12 | Orsiro | Biotronik AG | Co-Cr | Abluminal side: PLLA; luminal side: silicon carbide layer | Abluminal: the Biolute polymer: PLLA and sirolimus; luminal: amorphous hydrogen rich silicon carbide | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 13 | MAHOROBA | Kaneka | Co-Cr | PLGA | Rollcoat abluminal: tacrolimus + PLGA | Tacrolimus | Hu et al. ( |
| 14 | Synergy | Boston Scientific | Co-Cr | PLGA | Abluminal: everolimus + PLGA | Everolimus | Garg and Serruys ( |
| 15 | NOYA | Medfavor Medical | Co-Cr | PDLLA | Sirolimus + PDLLA | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 16 | Combostent | OrbusNeich Medical | Stainless steel | SynBiosys | Abluminal surface: sirolimus + SynBiosys; luminal: CD34 antibody layer | Sirolimus | Garg and Serruys ( |
| 17 | Inspiron | Scitech Medical | Co-Cr | PLLA + PDLLGA | Abluminal: sirolimus + PLLA + PDLLGA | Sirolimus | Hu et al. ( |
| 18 | TIVOLI | Essen Technology | Co-Cr | PLGA | Sirolimus + PLGA | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 19 | BuMA | SinoMed | Stainless steel | PLGA | Abluminal: base layer: poly(n-butyl methacrylate); drug layer: sirolimus + PLGA | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 20 | Firehawk stent | MicroPort Medical | Co-Cr | PDLLA | An abluminal groove: sirolimus + PDLLA; luminal: PDLLA | Sirolimus | Muramatsu et al. ( |
| 21 | Conor | Conor Medsystems | Stainless steel | PLGA | Reservoirs: PLGA and paclitaxel | Paclitaxel | Hu et al. ( |
| 22 | Cardiomind | Cardiomind | Nitinol | PLA + PLGA | – | Sirolimus | Guildford et al. ( |
| 23 | Champion | Boston Scientific | Stainless steel | PLA | – | Everolimus | Guildford et al. ( |
| 24 | Symbio | Cordis | Cobalt-Chromium | PLGA | – | Pimecrolimus + paclitaxel | Guildford et al. ( |
Properties of an ideal biodegradable scaffold (Wayangankar and Ellis 2015; Mariano et al. 2013)
| Biocompatibility: before, during and after degradation |
| Adequate radial strength |
| Adequate time for degradation; not too fast to increase inflammation, and not too long to provoke adverse body reaction, 4–6 months |
| No inflammatory process aggravating or initiating by degradation |
| Compatibility with DES technology and eluting drugs at a determined rate without any effect on the radial strength |
| Not having thick struts |
| Easy deliverability |
| Easy refrigeration |
| Enhanced visualization under fluoroscopy |
| Compatible with currently available equipment for deployment |
| Improved dwell time before deployment |
Fig. 1Requirements for biodegradable polymer-based drug-eluting stents
Potential advantages and disadvantages of biodegradable-based stents (Bourantas et al. 2013; Kereiakes et al. 2016; Onuma and Serruys 2011; Sharkawi et al. 2007)
| Potential advantages | |
| Restoration of cyclic pulsatility and normal vasomotion | Prevented acute occlusion |
| Prevented acute ST and subacute ST | Restoration of normal vessel curvature |
| Normalizing shear stress and cyclic strain | Prevented acute recoil |
| Prevented constrictive remodeling | Prevented expansive remodeling |
| Reduced risk of very late polymer reactions | Avoidance of stent malapposition |
| Reduced neoatherosclerosis | Avoidance of late luminal enlargement |
| Avoidance of late vessel wall inflammation | Prevented neointimal hyperplasia |
| Prevented late ST | Formation of a cap over lipid-rich plaque |
| Unjailing of side branches | |
| Disadvantages | |
| Unsuitable release profile for drug delivery system | Difficulty in delivery to the site of action because of thicker struts with larger crossing profile |
| Greater risk of acute strut fracture as a result of insufficient mechanical strength compared with metallic DES | Inadequate degradation and resorption profile |
| Increased rates of early thrombosis | Inflammatory degradation residues |
| Specific (cold) storage condition and specific deployment techniques | |
Fig. 2Phases of biodegradation for bioresorbable scaffolds (Onuma and Serruys 2011)
Pairwise comparisons of BA, BMS, DES, and BVS
| Advantages | Disadvantages | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| BA (Balloon angioplasty) | Widen a blocked vessel | Acute vessel closure, elastic recoil, neointimal proliferation, late constrictive remodeling | Simard et al. ( |
| BMS VS. BA | Declined rate of restenosis incidences, ability to maintain a widened vessel in long-term | Thrombosis, neointimal hyperplasia, and chronic inflammation | Rensing et al. ( |
| Nondegarable-based DES (traditional DES) VS. BMS | Treating hyperplasia and inflammation temporarily, minimized smooth-muscle proliferation (neointimal hyperplasia), reduced restenosis rate and decreased rates of target lesion revascularization by 50–70% | Long-term presence of non-degradable biomaterials in the vessels leads to thrombosis, neointimal hyperplasia, and chronic inflammation | Serruys et al. ( |
| Biodegradable-based DES VS. BMS | Minimized SMC proliferation, reduced restenosis rates, reduced rates of target lesion revascularization | Inflammatory response, late stent thrombosis, delayed healing, Immunosuppressive, the drugs loaded on DES delayed vascular healing and re-endothelialization, high risk of late thrombosis | Kočka et al. ( |
| BRS VS. permanent stenting BMS | Enhanced arterial recovery, positive remodeling, restore natural vascular response in the vessel, significant reduction in restenosis and late stent thrombosis, a potential for re-intervention, higher flexibility | Bioresorbable polymers are prone to stress relaxation, there is still a lack of works on evaluating both the pre-degradation properties and degradation performance of these scaffolds, their use in clinical procedures is still sparse due to the lack of experimental and computational analysis of their efficiency and suitability, with elastic recoil, constrictive remodeling and endothelium dysfunction being of concern | Serruys et al. ( |
Fig. 3The three phases of BRS functionality include mechanical support and drug delivery functions during the revascularization phase; the loss of radial rigidity and mechanical restraint during the restoration phase, during which cyclic pulsatility and vasomotion return; and resorption caused by mass loss with return of adaptive vascular remodeling responses. The time course for phases/changes noted on the top is specific for the absorb bioresorbable vascular scaffold. Molecular weight starts to decrease immediately after implantation, and drug elution is almost completed at 3 months. Radial support decreases at ~ 6 months and is minimal at 12 months. Representative histology images are from Yucatan swine. At 24 months, with progressive mass loss, the strut footprints begin to be replaced by provisional matrix (b-histology). At 36 months, mass loss is completed, and infiltration of connective tissue into strut voids makes the struts invisible on OCT between 36 and 48 months (Kereiakes et al. 2016)
Fig. 4Schematic presentation of amorphous polymer (left), semi-crystalline structure of the PLLA with crystal lamella (crystalline polylactide) interconnected by amorphous tie chains binding the lamellae together (middle) and semi-crystalline polymer (right) (Onuma and Serruys 2011)
BRSs with their properties
| Stent name | Manufacturer | Scaffold platform | Coating material | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ABSORB BVS 1.0 | Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, CA, USA | PLLA | PLLA |
| 2 | BVS 1.1 | Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, CA, USA | PLLA | PLLA |
| 3 | ReSolve/ReZolve | REVA Medical, San Diego, CA, USA | Tyrosine-derived polycarbonate | Tyrosine poly carbonate with iodine |
| 4 | Fantom | REVA Medical, San Diego, CA, USA | Tyrosine-derived polycarbonate | Bioresorbable polymer |
| 5 | IDEAL (first generation) | Bioresorbable Therapeutics Inc., Menlo Park, CA, USA | The backbone consists of polylactide anhydride mixed with a polymer of salicylic acid with a sebacic acid linker | SA/AA |
| 6 | IDEAL (Second generation) | Xenogenics Corp; Canton, MA, USA | The backbone consists of polylactide anhydride mixed with a polymer of salicylic acid with a sebacic acid linker | SA/AA |
| 7 | Xinsorb | Huaan Biotechnology, Laiwu, China | PLLA | PDLLA + PLLA |
| 8 | DREAMS 1G | Biotronik, Berlin, Germany | WE43 alloy, 93% Mg and 7% rare earth elements | Mg alloy |
| 9 | DREAMS 2G | Biotronik, Berlin, Germany | WE43 alloy, 93% Mg and 7% rare earth elements | Mg alloy |
| 10 | ART 18AZ | Arterial Remodeling Tech., France | PDLLA | None |
| 11 | Fast | Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA | PLLA | PLGA |
| 12 | Igaki-Tamai stent | Kyoto Medical Planning Co, Ltd, Kyoto, Japan | PLLA | None |
| 13 | Amaranth | Amaranth Medical Inc., CA, USA | PLLA | PLLA |
| 14 | Fortitude | Amaranth Medical Inc., CA, USA | PLLA | Bioresorbable polymer |
| 15 | Acute BRS | OrbusNeich, Fort Laudedale, FL, USA | PLLA-based polymer | PLLA, |
| 16 | AMS-1 | Biotronik, Berlin, Germany | WE43 alloy, 93% Mg and 7% rare earth elements | None |
| 17 | AMS-2 | Biotronik, Berlin, Germany | WE43 alloy, 93% Mg and 7% rare earth elements | None |
| 18 | AMS-3 | Biotronik, Berlin, Germany | WE43 alloy, 93% Mg and 7% rare earth elements | None |
| 19 | DESolve | Elixir Medical Corp., CA, USA | PLLA | Matrix of polylactide-based polymer |
| 20 | Arterius | The Innovate UK (TSB), and University of Bradford, UK | PLLA with extrusion | PLLA |
| 21 | QualiMed | QualiMed Innovative Medizinprodukte GmbH, Winsen, Germany | Mg | PLLA |
| 22 | Mirage Microfiber Scaffold, Coronary Artery Scaffold | Manli Cardiology, Singapore | PLLA | PLLA |
| 23 | MERES 100 | Meril Life Sciences, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India | PLLA | PLLA |
| 24 | REVA DES | REVA Medical, CA, USA | Polymer tyrosine-derived polycarbonate polymer | None |
Fig. 5Schematic description of a the cross-sectional (left) and side (right) views of a strut of the Cypher stent, b the cross-sectional (left) and side (right) views of a strut of the Taxus stent (a, b are two examples for diffusion-controlled drug release), c the side view of a strut of the Achieve stent, d the side view of a strut of the Conor stent, e the side view of the strut of the Janus CarboStent (c, d, and e are three examples of dissolution/degradation-controlled drug release) (Acharya and Park 2006)
Fig. 6Schematic view of coating procedure
Fig. 7SEM images of the nanofiber-coated PLA stent: (a) cross section and (b) top surface
Fig. 8Performance of the proposed screw stent made of PU/PCL (70/30) blend a in a segment of femoral vein removed from the leg of a patient, b stent in temporary shape (a screw with very small diameter) over a delivery instrument, c recovery step of the SMP stent delivered into the segment of 4 mm ID human femoral vein containing body temperature water at 37 °C (d). The filament diameter of the stent is 800 µm
Fig. 9SEM images of NIH-3T3 cells proliferated on PU/PCL(70/30) at day 7 a initial magnification *100 b initial magnification *500
Fig. 10Carotid artery of the sheep model: a before and b after the shape memory stent deployment; c transverse gray-scale and d color Doppler sonograms of the carotid artery at 4 months after stent placement
Fig. 11Schematic representation of the techniques used to manufacture polymer-free DES (Chen et al. 2015)