Design of a Biodegradable Aortic Heart Valve - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Design of a Biodegradable Aortic Heart Valve

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PGA. PGLA. PVA hydrogels. PHOH. Tissue Engineered Alternatives. Degradable scaffold ... PGA/P4OH. P4OH. PHOH. PGA. SMC and Endothelial Cells. 6. Why Don't They Work? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Design of a Biodegradable Aortic Heart Valve


1
Design of a Biodegradable Aortic Heart Valve
  • Jesse S. Little, MS
  • Stony Brook University
  • Department of Biomedical Engineering
  • 2003 Qualifying Exam Defense
  • July 16, 2003

2
Aortic Valve Structure 3-Leaflets, 3-Layers
Images Courtesy of http//www.heartlab.robarts.ca/
dissect/dissection2.html
3
Valve Pathologies Limit Blood Flow
  • Aortic Stenosis
  • Occlusion of orifice
  • Aortic Regurgitation
  • Abnormal backflow
  • Symptoms
  • Angina Pectoris
  • Myocardial Infarction
  • Arrhythmias

Image Courtesy of http//www.brisbio.ac.uk
4
Limited Options for Valve Replacement
  • Mechanical Valves
  • Readily available
  • Require life-long anticoagulants
  • 10 year life expectancy
  • Porcine Xenographs
  • Good initial haemodynamic performance
  • Do not require anticoagulants
  • 59 complication rate after 12 years
  • (Billiar and Sacks, 2000)

5
Tissue Engineered Alternatives
  • Degradable scaffold
  • SMC and Endothelial Cells

Polyesterurethanes
PGA
PGLA
Carotid Artery Femoral Artery
PGA/P4OH
PVA hydrogels
PHOH
P4OH
Image Courtesy of Hoerstrup et al., 2000
6
Why Dont They Work?
  • Difficult to form functional three leaflet valve
  • Bicuspid valves are more likely to become
    stenotic (Stephen et al., 1997)
  • Implanted valves failed to grow in vivo
    (Hoerstrup et al., 2000)
  • Are cells receiving wrong mechanical cues?

7
Tissue/Polymer Mechanical Profile Disparities
Polymer Bulk Material Properties
8
Past Attempts Controlled Porosity
  • Porogen Leaching
  • Advantages
  • - Controlled pore size
  • - Controlled porosity
  • - Disadvantages
  • - No control over general architecture
  • - Pores tend to be closed
  • - Limits cellular ingrowth
  • - Limits cell signalling

9
Other Modes of Pore Induction
  • Extrusion Fiber Braiding
  • Uses high temperature
  • Gas Foaming
  • No control over architecture
  • Electrospinning
  • Phase Separation
  • Uses organic solvents
  • Solid Free-Form Fabrication
  • 3D scaffolds built layer-by-layer
  • Internal/External architecture predefined

10
Design Objectives
  • General
  • Comprehensive tissue engineering approach to
    valve design
  • Specific
  • Provide good haemodynamics
  • Open and close during proper phases of
    systole/diastole
  • Minimize regurgitant volume
  • Scaffold should degrade within 8-12 weeks
  • Provide mechanical profile closely matching that
    of target tissue
  • Constraints
  • Avoid use of porogen leaching and electrospinning

11
Design General Description
  • Composite structure to recreate fibrous and
    GAG-rich layers
  • 3-leaflet structure
  • Fabricated using indirect solid free-form
    fabrication
  • Dynamically seeded with autologous cells

12
3-Layer Scaffold Mimicking Native Valve
  • Fibrosa Ventricularis
  • poly(propylene fumarate) crosslinked to
    poly(ethylene glycol)-dimethacrylate
  • PEG-DMA/PPF
  • Crosslinks in situ
  • Spongiosa
  • Chitosan crosslinked to chondroitin sulfate-A
    (CSA)
  • Chitosan - polysaccharide
  • CSA GAG
  • Crosslinks ionically

13
Indirect Solid Free-Form Fabrication
  • Micro-Stereolithography
  • Built in 1 µm thick layers
  • Resolution of 10 µm
  • Most rapidly advancing SFF type
  • Negative scaffold manufactured and used as mold
    for actual scaffold
  • Avoids restraints on polymer types
  • External geometry defined using Image-Based
    Design (IBD)
  • Internal architecture can be optimized and
    defined using CAD (.stl format)

14
Optimization of Internal Architecture
  • Calculation of effective scaffold and regenerate
    tissue stiffness Ceff CM
  • 2 distinct time points
  • t 0, Cscaffold eff
    CscaffoldM(d1,d2,d3)scaffold
  • t final, Ctissue eff
    CtissueM(d1,d2,d3)tissue

15
Minimized Stiffness Function
  • Optimization of pore architecture using
  • Constraints

Porosity 75, 80, 85, 90, 95
Vpore ?
Vtotal d33
16
Calculation of Pore Volume
V3_cyl A B C (I I-II I-II-III
I-III) (II I-II I-II-III II-III) (III
I-III II-III I-II-III) I II III
(I-II) (I-II) (I-II-III) (I-III)
(I-III) (I-IIIII) (II-III) (II-III)
(I-IIIII)
Shared Volume V(AB) (I-II) (I-II-III)
V(AC) (I-III) (I-II-III) V(BC) (II-III)
(I-II-III) V(ABC) (I-II-III)
V3_cyl I II III (I-II) (I-III)
(II-III) V(AB) V(AC) V(BC)
Vactual I II III (I-II) (I-III)
(II-III) (I-II-III)
Vactual V3_cyl V(AB) V(AC) V(BC)
V(ABC)
17
Optimal Pore Dimensions
18
Scaffold Fabricated in 3 Steps
  • Photopolymerization of initial mold
  • Low molecular weight monomer capable of
    chain-reacting under radiant energy
  • Small spot laser or masked lamp
  • Negative ceramic mold created
  • Hydroxyapatite (HA) and acrylic slurry
  • Sintered
  • PEG-DMA/PPF and chitosan/CSA injected into mold
    in layers
  • Ventricularis 0.17 mm PEG-DMA/PPF
  • Spongiosa 0.176 mm Chitosan/CSA
  • Fibrosa 0.30 mm PEG-DMA/PPF
  • Heat compression molding if necessary
  • Verified Using Mercury Intrusion Porosimetry
  • Pore size
  • Pore Volume
  • Surface Area of Scaffolds

19
Pore Size Monomer Ratio Effects on Strength
  • Determination of Effective Elastic and Shear
    Moduli
  • Tensile and Compressive
  • Calculation of Poissons Ratio
  • Creep-Recovery
  • Stress-Relaxation
  • Flexural Strength
  • Statistical Analysis of All Results
  • n5 for all pore/monomer ratio combinations
  • Test both individual layers valve construct
  • Normalized data Two-Factor ANOVA w/ post-hoc
    Bonferroni
  • Non-normalized data Paired Kruskal-Wallis Signed
    Rank test

20
Cell Harvesting, Culturing and Multiplication
  • Autologous saphenous vein harvested, minced into
    1 mm2 pieces
  • Endothelial cells separated from SMC
  • Enzymatic digestion for pure endo. culture
  • Removal of endo. lining for pure SMC culture
  • Verification using immunofluorescence staining
  • Endothelial cells () for PECAM 1 and vWF
  • SMC () for smooth muscle actin
  • Standard media supplemented with antibiotics

21
Dynamic Cell Culturing In vitro
  • Pulse Duplicator
  • Exposure to controllable shear forces
  • Proper alignment of SMC and endothelial cells
  • Better cell-to-cell communication
  • Functional ECM

22
In vitro Biological Testing
  • Cellular attachment using ESEM
  • Inclusion of adhesion molecules
  • t-test
  • Cellular proliferation using DNA assay
  • Monomer ratios/pore size
  • Two-factor ANOVA w/ post-hoc Bonferroni
  • ECM formation using 4-hydroxyproline assay
  • Monomer ratios/pore size
  • Two-factor ANOVA w/ post-hoc Bonferroni
  • Degradation rate

23
Hydrodynamic Performance Assessment
  • Satisfactory forward and regurgitant flow
  • Steady and pulsatile flow conditions
  • Continuous Digital Particle Image Velocimetry
  • Reynolds number (Re), volumetric flow rate (Q),
    pressure drop (?p)
  • Bernoulli Eqn.
  • Statistical comparison between valve and control
    using Two-Factor ANOVA w/ post-hoc Dunnetts test

24
In vivo Implantation in Lamb Model
  • Biocompatibility tests
  • Lamb model (n6)
  • FDA approved valve in control group (n2)
  • 20 week study duration
  • Echocardiography and angiography
  • Statistical comparisons using z-statistic
  • Histological examination upon sacrifice
  • Cellular organization and proliferation
  • Thrombus formation
  • Major organs examined for pathology

25
Costs and Benefits
  • Costs
  • One time incidentals for STL equipment, IBD CAD
    software
  • Daily technical support for cellular expansion
  • Additional surgical procedure
  • Benefits
  • Structural approach to scaffold design
  • More accurate mechanical cues
  • Fine control over external shape
  • Better functionality and closure
  • Avoids the need for anticoagulants
  • POTENTIAL FOR GROWTH

26
Design Limitations
  • Necessitates additional surgical procedure for
    autologous cells
  • Allogenic cells could be used
  • Increased inflammatory response
  • Possible reduction by encapsulating
    fluoroquinolones into scaffold
  • Not possible for emergent cases

27
Future Directions
  • Modifications to optimization procedure
  • Degradation using hydrolysis and molecular weight
  • Gradient pore size
  • Encourage directionality of collagen organization
  • Nanoscale surface topography
  • Surface etching
  • Better cellular attachment
  • Inclusion of actual GAG found in spongiosa

28
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