Transcatheter endomyocardial alginate-hydrogel injection for treatment of heart failure
European Heart Journal 44(Supplement_2)
Article 2023 English
Authors
BW
Bei Wang
RL
Richard Lee
CZ
Chao Zhu
Abstract
2 min read
Background and Aim Intramyocardial injection of alginate-hydrogel, an emerging and promising strategy for patients with advanced heart failure (HF), is limited by the paucity of commercially available intramyocardial delivery methods. This study investigates the feasibility and safety of a novel X-DROP catheter injection system (Figure 1) for delivery of the alginate-hydrogel to pre-defined target areas in the treatment of HF with reduced ejection fraction. Methods and results Prior to the First-in-man, we demonstrated that transcatheter endo-myocardial alginate-hydrogel implantation (TEAi) was successfully and precisely performed with the X-DROP catheter system under TEE and fluoroscopy guidance in a healthy porcine model (Figure 2). Acute animal results (n = 15) showed no mortality, perforation, and sustained ventricular arrhythmias. Gross examination revealed the retention of the alginate-hydrogel in the pre-defined endocardial area at six months post-procedure (n = 4, Figure 2). The histological assessment showed that alginate-hydrogel was encapsulated by multiple layers of fibrosis without causing damage to the nearby myocardium. Expanding from the animal result, we conducted a first-in-human trial to evaluate the TEAi in patients with heart failure. Ten patients with NYHA class III-IV were enrolled, and all patients were successfully treated with TEAi without the device or procedure-related complications. At the 30-day follow-up, there were no serious adverse device events. One death occurred at a 3-month follow-up. The mean LVEF evaluated by MRI improved from 17.7±3.82 % at baseline to 24.94±11.15 % at 6 months post-procedure (p = 0.046). Also, ESV (297.50±67.85 vs 264.79±101.41, p = 0.029), EDV (359.5±71.92 vs 341.56±67.85, p = 0.105), six minutes walking test (339.7±37.6 m vs 370.4±64.8 m, p = 0.184), NYHA functional class (30% Class III and 70% Class IV vs 100% Class II), and KCCQ score (49.7±3.91 vs 79.0±8.1) were improved at 6-month follow-up. Holter monitor data showed no sustained ventricular arrhythmia during the TEAi or follow-up. Conclusions Our results established the safety and feasibility of TEAi using a novel platform, the X-DROP system and paved the way for the clinical application of intramyocardial injection of alginate-hydrogel in patients with HF.Figure 1Figure 2
Bo Wang, Shuo Wang, Chao Gao, D. Scott Lim, Rutao Wang, Xin Meng, Ying Liu, Chao Zhu, Yoshinobu Onuma, Yunbing Wang, Patrick W. Serruys, Runlin Gao, R J Lee, Ling Tao
Pieter C. Smits, Christoph Nienaber, Antonio Colombo, Hüseyin İnce, Mauro Carlino, Dominique A. M. J. Theuns, Elena Biagini, Marco Valgimigli, Emile Onderwater, Paul Steendijk, Nicholas S. Peters, Dick Goedhart, Patrick W. Serruys
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.