4.6 Article

Virtual Transcatheter Interventions for Peripheral Pulmonary Artery Stenosis in Williams and Alagille Syndromes

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.121.023532

Keywords

computational fluid dynamics; peripheral pulmonary artery stenosis; pulmonary artery reconstruction; pulmonary artery stenting; pulmonary hemodynamics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01--EB018302]
  2. Vera Moulton Wall Center for Pulmonary Vascular Disease at Stanford University
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  4. Stanford Graduate Fellowship in Science and Engineering

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This study investigated the hemodynamic outcomes of transcatheter interventions in patients with Williams and Alagille syndromes using simulation models. The results showed that extensive interventions were effective in reducing PA pressures and right ventricular stroke work, while transcatheter therapy was less effective for long-segment stenosis. Regardless of the strategy chosen, a virtual treatment planning platform could identify critical lesions for optimizing right ventricular afterload.
Background Despite favorable outcomes of surgical pulmonary artery (PA) reconstruction, isolated proximal stenting of the central PAs is common clinical practice for patients with peripheral PA stenosis in association with Williams and Alagille syndromes. Given the technical challenges of PA reconstruction and the morbidities associated with transcatheter interventions, the hemodynamic consequences of all treatment strategies must be rigorously assessed. Our study aims to model, assess, and predict hemodynamic outcomes of transcatheter interventions in these patients. Methods and Results Isolated proximal and extensive interventions (stenting and/or balloon angioplasty of proximal and lobar vessels) were performed in silico on 6 patient-specific PA models. Autoregulatory adaptation of the cardiac output and downstream arterial resistance was modeled in response to intervention-induced hemodynamic perturbations. Postintervention computational fluid dynamics predictions were validated in 2 stented patients and quantitatively assessed in 4 surgical patients. Our computational methods accurately predicted postinterventional PA pressures, the primary indicators of success for treatment of peripheral PA stenosis. Proximal and extensive treatment achieved median reductions of 14% and 40% in main PA systolic pressure, 27% and 56% in pulmonary vascular resistance, and 10% and 45% in right ventricular stroke work, respectively. Conclusions In patients with Williams and Alagille syndromes, extensive transcatheter intervention is required to sufficiently reduce PA pressures and right ventricular stroke work. Transcatheter therapy was shown to be ineffective for long-segment stenosis and pales hemodynamically in comparison with published outcomes of surgical reconstruction. Regardless of the chosen strategy, a virtual treatment planning platform could identify lesions most critical for optimizing right ventricular afterload.

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