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Chronic haemodynamic performance of a biorestorative transcatheter heart valve in an ovine model

Authors :
William Flameng
Yoshinobu Onuma
Rodrigo Modolo
Patrick W. Serruys
Hadewych Van Hauwermeiren
Osama Ibrahim Ibrahim Soliman
Robbert J. de Winter
Wian van den Bergh
Rutao Wang
Hideyuki Kawashima
Martijn Cox
Mohammed El-Kurdi
Chun Chin Chang
Cardiology
ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
Source :
EuroIntervention, 17(12), E1009-E1018. EuroPCR
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Europa Digital & Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

Background: The Xeltis biorestorative transcatheter heart valve (BTHV) leaflets are made from an electrospun bioabsorbable supramolecular polycarbonate-urethane and are mounted on a self-expanding nitinol frame. The acute haemodynamic performance of this BTHV was favourable. Aims: We sought to demonstrate the preclinical feasibility of a novel BTHV by evaluating the haemodynamic performances of five pilot valve designs up to 12 months in a chronic ovine model. Methods: Five design iterations (A, B, B', C, and D) of the BTHV were transapically implanted in 46 sheep; chronic data were available in 39 animals. Assessments were performed at implantation, 3, 6, and 12 months including quantitative aortography, echocardiography, and histology. Results: At 12 months, greater than or equal to moderate AR on echocardiography was seen in 0%, 100%, 33.3%, 100%, and 0% in the iterations A, B, B', C, and D, respectively. Furthermore, transprosthetic mean gradients on echocardiography were 10.0±2.8 mmHg, 19.0±1.0 mmHg, 8.0±1.7 mmHg, 26.8±2.4 mmHg, and 11.2±4.1 mmHg, and effective orifice area was 0.7±0.3 cm2, 1.1±0.3 cm2, 1.5±1.0 cm2, 1.5±0.6 cm2, and 1.0±0.4 cm2 in the iterations A, B, B', C, and D, respectively. On pathological evaluation, the iteration D demonstrated generally intact leaflets and advanced tissue coverage, while different degrees of structural deterioration were observed in the other design iterations. Conclusions: Several leaflet material iterations were compared for the potential to demonstrate endogenous tissue restoration in an aortic valve in vivo. The most promising iteration showed intact leaflets and acceptable haemodynamic performance at 12 months, illustrating the potential of the BTHV.

Details

ISSN :
19696213 and 1774024X
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EuroIntervention
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....086d51c6bd77f3e40ecd0b56c8e0ee3c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4244/eij-d-21-00386