4.2 Article

Poly(ethylene glycol)-Based Coatings for Bioprosthetic Valve Tissues: Toward Restoration of Physiological Behavior

Journal

ACS APPLIED BIO MATERIALS
Volume 3, Issue 12, Pages 8352-8360

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsabm.0c00550

Keywords

bioprosthetic valve; surface coating; glutaraldehyde fixation; aortic valve; poly(ethylene glycol)diacrylate; poly(ethylene glycol)diacrylamide; hydrogel coating

Funding

  1. American Heart Association's Predoctoral Fellowship [18PRE33960068]
  2. March of Dimes Research Grant [6-FY13-86]

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Bioprosthetic valves (BPVs) have a limited lifespan in the body necessitating repeated surgeries to replace the failed implant. Early failure of these implants has been linked to various surface properties of the valve. Surface properties of BPVs are significantly different from physiological valves because of the fixation process used when processing the xenograft tissue. To improve the longevity of BPVs, efforts need to be taken to improve the surface properties and shield the implant from the bodily interactions that degrade it. Toward this goal, we evaluated the use of hydrogel coatings to attach to the BPV tissue and impart surface properties that are close to physiological. Hydrogels are well characterized for their biocompatibility and highly tunable surface characteristics. Using a previously published coating method, we deposited hydrogel coatings of poly(ethylene glycol)diacrylate (PEGDA) and poly(ethylene glycol)diacrylamide (PEGDAA) atop BPV samples. Coated samples were evaluated against the physiological tissue and uncoated glutaraldehyde-fixed tissue for deposition of hydrogel, surface adherence, mechanical properties, and fixation properties. Results showed both PEGDA- and PEGDAA-deposited coatings were nearly continuous across the valve leaflet surface. Further, the PEGDA- and PEGDAA-coated samples showed restoration of physiological levels of protein adhesion and mechanical stiffness. Interestingly, the coating process rather than the coating itself altered the material behavior yet did not alter the cross-linking from fixation. These results show that the PEG-based coatings for BPVs can successfully alter surface properties of BPVs and help promote physiological characteristics without interfering with the necessary fixation.

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