4.2 Article

Development and In Vitro Whole Blood Hemocompatibility Screening of Endothelium-Mimetic Multifunctional Coatings

Journal

ACS APPLIED BIO MATERIALS
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages 2212-2223

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsabm.2c00073

Keywords

biomaterials; thrombosis; medical devices; nitric oxide; heparin; hemocompatibiliiy; coagulation; hemostasis

Funding

  1. U.S. Army Medical Research & Development Command through the Combat Casualty Care Research Program [X_041_2020]

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We have developed an endothelium-inspired strategy to reduce the thrombogenicity of medical plastics by imparting nitric oxide (NO) elution and heparin immobilization on the material surface. In vitro experiments showed that the modified surface can reduce platelet aggregation and prolong plasma clotting time.
Multifunctional antithrombotic surface modifications for blood-contacting medical devices have emerged as a solution for foreign surface-mediated coagulation disturbance. Herein, we have developed and evaluated an endothelium-inspired strategy to reduce the thrombogenicity of medical plastics by imparting nitric oxide (NO) elution and heparin immobilization on the material surface. This dual-action approach (NO+Hep) was applied to polyethylene terephthalate (PET) blood incubation vials and compared to isolated modifications. Vials were characterized to evaluate NO surface flux as well as heparin density and activity. Hemocompatibility was assessed in vitro using whole blood from human donors. Compared to unmodified surfaces, blood incubated in the NO+Hep vials exhibited reduced platelet aggregation (15% decrease AUC, p = 0.040) and prolonged plasma clotting times (aPTT = 147% increase, p < 0.0001, prothrombin time = 5% increase, p = 0.0002). Prolongation of thromboelastography reaction time and elevated antifactor Xa levels in blood from NO+Hep versus PET vials suggests some heparin leaching from the vial surface, confirmed by post-blood incubation heparin density assessment. Results suggest NO+Hep surface modification is a promising approach for blood-contacting plastics; however, careful tuning of NO flux and heparin stabilization are essential and require assessment using human blood as performed here.

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