Literature DB >> 30342288

Effect of working environment and procedural strategies on mechanical performance of bioresorbable vascular scaffolds.

Pei-Jiang Wang1, Farhad Rikhtegar Nezami2, Maysam B Gorji3, Francesca Berti4, Lorenza Petrini5, Tomasz Wierzbicki6, Francesco Migliavacca7, Elazer R Edelman8.   

Abstract

Polymeric bioresorbable scaffolds (BRS), at their early stages of invention, were considered as a promising revolution in interventional cardiology. However, they failed dramatically compared to metal stents showing substantially higher incidence of device failure and clinical events, especially thrombosis. One problem is that use of paradigms inherited from metal stents ignores dependency of polymer material properties on working environment and manufacturing/deployment steps. Unlike metals, polymeric material characterization experiments cannot be considered identical under dry and submerged conditions at varying rates of operation. We demonstrated different material behaviors associated with variable testing environment and parameters. We, then, have employed extracted material models, which are verified by computational methods, to assess the performance of a full-scale BRS in different working condition and under varying procedural strategies. Our results confirm the accepted notion that slower rate of crimping and inflation can potentially reduce stress concentrations and thus reduce localized damages. However, we reveal that using a universal set of material properties derived from a benchtop experiment conducted regardless of working environment and procedural variability may lead to a significant error in estimation of stress-induced damages and overestimation of benefits procedural updates might offer. We conclude that, for polymeric devices, microstructural damages and localized loss of structural integrity should complement former macroscopic performance-assessment measures (fracture and recoil). Though, to precisely capture localized stress concentration and microstructural damages, context-related testing environment and clinically-relevant procedural scenarios should be devised in preliminary experiments of polymeric resorbable devices to enhance their efficacy and avoid unpredicted clinical events. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Bioresorbable scaffolds (BRS) with the hope to become the next cardiovascular interventional revolution failed in comparison to metal stents. When BRS were characterized using methods for metal stents, designers were misled to seek problem sources at erroneous timeframe and use inefficient indicators, and thus no signal of concern emerged. We demonstrated fundamental flaws associated with applying a universal set of material properties to study device performances in different phases of manufacturing/implantation, and these may be responsible for failure in predicting performance in first-generation BRS. We introduced new criterion for the assessment of structural integrity and device efficacy in next-generation BRS, and indeed all devices using polymeric materials which evolve with the environment they reside in.
Copyright © 2018 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bioresorbable scaffolds; Finite element analysis; Microstructural damages; Polymer characterization; Working environment

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30342288      PMCID: PMC6295666          DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2018.10.020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Biomater        ISSN: 1742-7061            Impact factor:   8.947


  25 in total

Review 1.  The Systems Biocompatibility of Coronary Stenting.

Authors:  Kumaran Kolandaivelu; Farhad Rikhtegar
Journal:  Interv Cardiol Clin       Date:  2016-06-21

Review 2.  Possible mechanical causes of scaffold thrombosis: insights from case reports with intracoronary imaging.

Authors:  Yohei Sotomi; Pannipa Suwannasom; Patrick W Serruys; Yoshinobu Onuma
Journal:  EuroIntervention       Date:  2017-02-20       Impact factor: 6.534

3.  Effects of fatigue on the chemical and mechanical degradation of model stent sub-units.

Authors:  Maureen L Dreher; Srinidhi Nagaraja; Benjamin Batchelor
Journal:  J Mech Behav Biomed Mater       Date:  2015-12-28

4.  Stent fracture associated with drug-eluting stents: clinical characteristics and implications.

Authors:  Michael S Lee; Daniel Jurewitz; Joseph Aragon; James Forrester; Raj R Makkar; Saibal Kar
Journal:  Catheter Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2007-02-15       Impact factor: 2.692

5.  Predilation, sizing and post-dilation scoring in patients undergoing everolimus-eluting bioresorbable scaffold implantation for prediction of cardiac adverse events: development and internal validation of the PSP score.

Authors:  Luis Ortega-Paz; Davide Capodanno; Tommaso Gori; Holger Nef; Azeem Latib; Giuseppe Caramanno; Carlo Di Mario; Christoph Naber; Maciej Lesiak; Piera Capranzano; Jens Wiebe; Julinda Mehilli; Aleksander Araszkiewicz; Stelios Pyxaras; Alessio Mattesini; Salvatore Geraci; Toru Naganuma; Antonio Colombo; Thomas Münzel; Manel Sabaté; Corrado Tamburino; Salvatore Brugaletta
Journal:  EuroIntervention       Date:  2017-04-20       Impact factor: 6.534

6.  Stent thrombogenicity early in high-risk interventional settings is driven by stent design and deployment and protected by polymer-drug coatings.

Authors:  Kumaran Kolandaivelu; Rajesh Swaminathan; William J Gibson; Vijaya B Kolachalama; Kim-Lien Nguyen-Ehrenreich; Virginia L Giddings; Leslie Coleman; Gee K Wong; Elazer R Edelman
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2011-03-21       Impact factor: 29.690

7.  Comparison of an everolimus-eluting bioresorbable scaffold with an everolimus-eluting metallic stent for the treatment of coronary artery stenosis (ABSORB II): a 3 year, randomised, controlled, single-blind, multicentre clinical trial.

Authors:  Patrick W Serruys; Bernard Chevalier; Yohei Sotomi; Angel Cequier; Didier Carrié; Jan J Piek; Ad J Van Boven; Marcello Dominici; Dariusz Dudek; Dougal McClean; Steffen Helqvist; Michael Haude; Sebastian Reith; Manuel de Sousa Almeida; Gianluca Campo; Andrés Iñiguez; Manel Sabaté; Stephan Windecker; Yoshinobu Onuma
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2016-10-30       Impact factor: 79.321

8.  A pooled analysis of data comparing sirolimus-eluting stents with bare-metal stents.

Authors:  Christian Spaulding; Joost Daemen; Eric Boersma; Donald E Cutlip; Patrick W Serruys
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2007-02-12       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  Macro- and microscale variables regulate stent haemodynamics, fibrin deposition and thrombomodulin expression.

Authors:  Juan M Jiménez; Varesh Prasad; Michael D Yu; Christopher P Kampmeyer; Abdul-Hadi Kaakour; Pei-Jiang Wang; Sean F Maloney; Nathan Wright; Ian Johnston; Yi-Zhou Jiang; Peter F Davies
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 4.118

10.  Magnetically enhanced cell delivery for accelerating recovery of the endothelium in injured arteries.

Authors:  Richard F Adamo; Ilia Fishbein; Kehan Zhang; Justin Wen; Robert J Levy; Ivan S Alferiev; Michael Chorny
Journal:  J Control Release       Date:  2015-12-17       Impact factor: 9.776

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  2 in total

1.  In vivo and in vitro evaluation of a biodegradable magnesium vascular stent designed by shape optimization strategy.

Authors:  Chenxin Chen; Jiahui Chen; Wei Wu; Yongjuan Shi; Liang Jin; Lorenza Petrini; Li Shen; Guangyin Yuan; Wenjiang Ding; Junbo Ge; Elazer R Edelman; Francesco Migliavacca
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2019-08-05       Impact factor: 12.479

2.  Resistance of 3D-Printed Components, Test Specimens and Products to Work under Environmental Conditions-Review.

Authors:  Marcin Głowacki; Adam Mazurkiewicz; Małgorzata Słomion; Katarzyna Skórczewska
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2022-09-05       Impact factor: 3.748

  2 in total

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