450 likes | 652 Views
Drug Elution The Technology AA ‘02. Martin T Rothman Barts & The London Trust. 1. Thanks to: Cordis Guidant BSC Cook Biocompatibles My mother As I will forget at the end!!!. The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug. Drug Elution The Technology.
E N D
Drug ElutionThe TechnologyAA ‘02 Martin T Rothman Barts & The London Trust 1
Thanks to: Cordis Guidant BSC Cook Biocompatibles My mother As I will forget at the end!!!
The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug Drug ElutionThe Technology
Methods of Stent-mediated Delivery Degradable Reservoir } Coating { Stent COOK CONOR-MEDSYSTEMS IGAKI-TAMAI 2mm } Top- coat } } 5mm Covalent attachment 5mm Sub- layer CORDIS CORDIS (Hepacoat) GUIDANT + + + + + 1mm } } 1mm BOSTON SCIENTIFIC BiodivYsio Matrix LO BiodivYsio Matrix HI Low molecular weight drug High molecular weight drug
The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug Drug ElutionThe Technology
Current Stent Issues • Metal Content • 316L - <0.03% carbon, • iron 69%, • chromium 18%, • nickel 10% • molybdenum 3% • Nitinol nickel ~55% • titanium ~45% • Tantalum • Surface Finish • Stent Design • flexibility • uniformity of deployment
Device V-Flex Plus™ Coronary Stent • stainless steel, slotted tube • high radial strength and low recoil • diameters: 3.0 or 3.5 mm • length: 16 mm • coated stents have paclitaxel adhered to the abluminal surface using a proprietary process with no polymer.
Biodegradable Stent • Igaki-Tamai Stent • Coil of Poly-l-Latic Acid monopolymer • 0.17 mm thick, zigzag helical coil • 12 mm length, 24% wall coverage • Self-expanding Tamai H et al, Circ 102(4),2000;399-404
Biodegradable Stent Tamai H et al, Circ 102(4),2000;399-404
Biodegradable Stent Tamai H et al, Circ 102(4),2000;399-404
The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug Drug ElutionThe Technology
Non inflammatory Non thrombogenic Competitive shelf-life Stable for duration of stent lifetime Neutral to drug structure and chemistry Can be sterilised by standard approaches Controlled release (timing and dosage) No limitation on use (tortuosity, etc) Strong clinical data Coating Requirements
Arterial Side PC coating Drug 1 mm } Targeted drug delivery direct to arterial wall Stent Strut Stent strut cross-section Lumen Side BiodivYsio Drug Delivery Stent- Site-Specific Delivery • Smooth coating • Thrombo-resistant surface
Some Coatings Are Not Always Stable Effects of stent expansion and sterilisation on first generation stent coatings Grube E, Cath Lab Digest, 2001, 9(9), 52 Costa, M, TCT Presentation, 2001
Programmable Release Kinetics Coating Uniformity Coating Durability Dosing Efficiency & Repeatability Why use a Carrier Matrix? With Carrier Without Carrier
Blood Contact- In-vitro Uncoated and blood contacted PC coated and blood contacted Adhered and activated platelets Lewis AL, Tolhurst LA & Stratford PW, Biomaterials, 2001, in press
PC is Non-Inflammatory PC Polymer Coated Stent (1 month) ConventionalPolymer Coated Stent (1 month) van der Giessen WJ, et al, Circulation, 1996, 94, 1690 Whelan DM, et al, Heart, 2000, 83, 338
Normal Endothelialisation • PC coating does not affect endothelial-isation • 91% EC coverage within 5 days1 • Fully endothelialised at 30 days2 20mm 1 Whelan DM, et al, Heart, 2000, 83, 338 2 SEM courtesy of Prof I de Scheerder
The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug Drug ElutionThe Technology
Mechanism Of Restenosis • Thrombosis days 0 - 3 • Inflammation days 4 – 8 • Migration/Proliferation days 4 – 8+ • Healing days 8 - 90
The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug Drug ElutionThe Technology Early Action
BiodivYsio Corticosteroid Stent- Programmed Release • PC coating controls drug release • Appropriate timing of delivery for anti-inflammatory action (over first 7 days)
BiodivYsio Matrix LO Drug Loading <1.2k Mwt Solution Drug (>1.2k) Drug (<1.2k) Coating Stent surface
Drug & CoatingBiodivYsio Corticosteroid Stent • Low inflammatory response • Minimal neointimal hyperplasia observed • Minimal inflammatory response induced
Drug & CoatingBiodivYsio Corticosteroid Stent • Normal re-endothelialisation • Endothelialisation unaffected by presence of drug or coating
Pre-stent Post-stent 6-months Case Study 3
The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug Drug ElutionThe Technology Intermediate Action
Polymer coating Name: TRUECoat Chemical Structure: Backbone structure: C-C bond Low potential for hydrolytic or oxidative chain scission No aromatic component Low risk for chronic toxicity or harmful leachates. Polymer Properties: Thermal: Tg ~ 55-60oC. Tm ~ 165oC Transport: High transport barrier property for moisture vapor diffusion Sterilization compatibility: E-beam Mechanical: Does not crack or rip on the stent surface Polymer Coating - Actinomycin
Top coat Drug coat Primer coat Metal stent Balloon Coating Formulation Overall coating thickness ~ 5 - 6 nm
The Stent The Coating The Binding The Release The Drug Drug ElutionThe Technology Delayed Action
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMP’s) are secreted by cells to digest extracellular matrix and allow cell to migrate Smoothmuscle cells Cell migration MMP secretion Batimastat Collagen MMP activity Batimastat - An MMP Inhibitor
Batimastat Batimastat - Mode of Action Inflammation Migration Proliferation Restenosis • Smooth muscle cell migration inhibited • Neointimal hyperplasia reduced • Re-endothelialisation unaffected* * From pre-clinical assessment
BiodivYsio Batimastat Stent- Sustained Release • PC coating controls • drug release • Appropriate timing • of delivery • Batimastat delivered • over prolonged period • No irreversible drug- • coating interactions In-vitro (top) Extrapolation in-vivo (right) Lewis AL et al, J. Mater. Sci., Mater Med, 2001, in press
) Ci m ( 1.25 30 (A) (B) stent ) Ci m 1.00 25 20 0.75 Delivered activity ( 15 0.50 Remaining activity on coated 10 0.25 5 0 0.00 0.1 3.0 6.0 72.0 192.0 336.0 0.1 3.0 6.0 72.0 192.0 336.0 (8 d) (14 d) (8 d) (14 d) Time Artery follow - up (Hours) (Hours) Delivery of DNA from the BiodivYsio Matrix HI Stent • (A) 32P-Labeled oligonucleotide elution from the stent • (B) Concomitant intra-tissue delivery of oligonucleotide Leclerc G, et al, unpublished data
StentChemotherapy Carrier Inert Polymer IV in Cremophor Vehicle Dose 1.0 µg/mm2 110-250 mg/m2 (85µg/16mm stent) Total 1.22 µg/kg 3280 µg/kg ovarian Ca 4250 µg/kg breast Ca Dose from Stent is Over 3000x Less than Chemotherapy Paclitaxel Dose Levels
Adverse (Positive) Remodelling Adverse Hyperplasia (Restenosis) 0 Late Loss (mm) Stent Drug Delivery: Optimising Efficacy and Safety • Conventional Stenting • Restenosis • Repeat procedures • Additional cost • KNOWN PATIENT RISK • Aggressive-drug Stenting • Positive Remodelling • Stent mal-apposition • Late thrombosis? • INCREASED PATIENT RISK?
The future is not the stent, but what is stuck around it……..