4.5 Article

Acute In Vivo Functional Assessment of a Biodegradable Stentless Elastomeric Tricuspid Valve

Journal

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages 796-805

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12265-020-09960-z

Keywords

Tissue-engineered heart valve; Tricuspid valve replacement; Double-component deposition; Electrospinning; In vivo study; Biodegradable valve prosthesis

Funding

  1. Wallace H. Coulter Foundation Translational Bioengineering Research Award
  2. Clinical and Translational Science Institute of the University of Pittsburgh
  3. RiMED Foundation [0057091]

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Degradable heart valves based on in situ tissue regeneration have been proposed as potentially durable and non-thrombogenic prosthetic alternatives. We evaluated the acute in vivo function, microstructure, mechanics, and thromboresistance of a stentless biodegradable tissue-engineered heart valve (TEHV) in the tricuspid position. Biomimetic stentless tricuspid valves were fabricated with poly(carbonate urethane)urea (PCUU) by double-component deposition (DCD) processing to mimic native valve mechanics and geometry. Five swine then underwent 24-h TEHV implantation in the tricuspid position. Echocardiography demonstrated good leaflet motion and no prolapse and trace to mild regurgitation in all but one animal. Histology revealed patches of proteinaceous deposits with no cellular uptake. SEM demonstrated retained scaffold microarchitecture with proteinaceous deposits but no platelet aggregation or thrombosis. Explanted PCUU leaflet thickness and mechanical anisotropy were comparable with native tricuspid leaflets. Bioinspired, elastomeric, stentless TEHVs fabricated by DCD were readily implantable and demonstrated good acute function in the tricuspid position.

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