This invention relates to temporary stents and particularly to the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Almost all available stents are so called permanent stents e.g. they are designed to be inserted in occluded vessels and organs to permanently support the vessel and keep it open.
The majority of the permanent stents are expandable to facilitate insertion through a small access and the ratio of the non-expanded diameter to the expanded diameter which is determined by the size of the vessel is often small such as 1:3 and less. In general such stents have the openings in the walls to enhance overgrowth and ingrowth of tissue therefore the removal of expanded stents designed for permanent implantation is difficult and risky.
The golden standard for the treatment of benign prostate hyperplasia, BPH is transurethral resection TURP, which is surgery and means several days of hospitalisation and often results in severe side effects. It also means carrying an indwelling catheter during weeks and sometimes more.
Thermotherapy, such as heat treatment of the prostate with microwaves, interstitial radiofrequency, hot balloons are interesting alternatives to TURP because it is less invasive and have less side effects. It is accomplished by heating the prostate to temperatures above 50-60°, which leads to a decrease in the swelling of the prostate, as the prostatic gland.
A great problem connected to different kind of thermotherapy is however that the prostatic gland temporary swells in response to the burn so that at higher temperatures and more efficient treatment there is a great risk for acute blockage of the urethra.
During the healing process of the prostate and the urethra the damaged tissue will be reabsorbed and partly slough off. The healing takes several weeks and it is therefore necessary to catheterise the patient during the healing, which is a great drawback to this kind of therapy. A long catheterisation time means not only a great discomfort for the patient but also risk for infections. Thermotherapy will therefore hardly replace TURP unless the catherisation can be reduced to a few days or totally replaced.
It is therefore a need for a temporary stent to keep the urethra open during the healing. Such a stent must have an appropriate length and be precisely placed between the bladder neck and the outer sphincter to eliminate the risk for blockage by the swelling prostate on unsupported parts of the urethra or incontinence if a part of the stent protrudes into the sphincter. Such a temporary stent must also be easy to take out after the healing or in case of dislocation.
A commonly used material for stents is a so called memory or recovery metal such as Nitinol®, which is an alloy based on nickel and titanium. Such alloys undergo a transition between a strong austenitic state and a soft martensitic state at certain temperatures. They have been subject to a great deal of interest due to the extraordinary “memory” they possess.
An expanded memorised shape can be set into such recovery metals by heating them while they are constrained in the desired expanded configuration. The forming temperature for setting the initial shape is typically around 500° C. After cooling the alloy to its martensite state it can be mechanically deformed to a second, smaller configuration which is suitable for introduction in the organ to be stented. After placement is the alloy heated to its transition temperature, and expands to its austenite, strong state and recover its initial memorised configuration.
For replacement of indwelling catheters in urology a stainless steal coil was introduced by Fabian 1980 followed by several similar stents for temperature use such as Prostakath™. A drawback with this type of non-expandable stents is that they often migrate.
Memokath®, Engineers & Doctors, Denmark was developed to overcome the shortcomings of Prostakath™. It is a cylindrical coil stent made up of a single wire of a Nitinol® alloy. The material has a transition temperature of about 45° C. and becomes soft at 10° C. Because of the memory capability the stent is given a primary shape where one or more segments has a diameter, which is considerably greater than the rest of the stent and a secondary shape where the segment with the greater diameter has been reduced to the same smaller diameter as the rest of the stent, WO 93/13824 and “From Prostakath® to Memokath®”, Nordling et al. in “Stenting the Urinary System”, pp. 285-290, Oxford Isis Medical Medica Ltd, 1998.
In the commercial configuration has the Memokath® stent in its non-expanded secondary shape an inner diameter of 6.7 mm. In the primary shape is only the proximal part adjacent the sphincter expanded to a bell shape with tightly coiled wires. The expansion is activated by the injection of water at 50 to 60° C., expanding the proximal part to a diameter of about 13 mm locking the stent in the urethra. The expansion takes place by the unwinding of the outer coil and then coil by coil successively until the expansion is accomplished. The injection of a hot liquid into the urethra can, however, cause pain and can even damage certain parts of the urethra, such as the sphincter. If lower temperatures are used, there is on the other hand a risk that the stent does not develop fully.
The stent can be taken out by injection of cold ice water so the material reverts to its pliable, soft martensite state allowing deformation so the stent spiral will be partly straightened when it is pulled out using the grasping forceps of a cystoscope.
It has also been proposed the use of biodegradable polymers for temporary stents. Such a stent should be strong enough to support the wall during several weeks and then degrade.
Suitable material for such stents are for example polymers of poly-k-hydroxiacids such as polyglycolic acid (PGA) or polylactic acid (PLLA) used since many years in bone surgery. These materials are thermoplastic and can be thermoformed or drawn in the form of strips or wires.
Stents made of such materials have been suggested as replacement for permanent, metallic stents for stenting of coronary arteries to prevent restenosis after coronary intervention, which commonly occurs 3 to 6 months afterwards. So for example is the Igaki-Tamai stent made of PLLA in a zigzag helical coil pattern. The stent is expanded by inflation of a standard angioplasty balloon catheter with a heated liquid (Tamai et al: “Initial and 6 months results of Biodegradable Poly-1-Lactid acid coronary stents in human). It is important that such an expansion is almost immediate and complete along the entire length of the stent to get fixation of the stent and to prevent occlusions in the coronay vessels and minimise vessel injury by heat. This is possible because the expansion occurs by straightening of the zigzag formed helical design.
It has also been proposed to use biodegradable polymers in the form of a spiral as a temporary stent for the treatment of BPH. An example is the Spiroflo® stent (Mentor, USA) which is made of a copolymer of PGA and PLLA (PLGA). It would be that there is no need for a second intervention to take out the stent as for the metallic stents. This spiral has an initial outer diameter of about 8 mm and can be inserted with the help of a cystoscope. Although, such stents can self-extend somewhat after insertion due to influence of the body temperature, the expansion is slow and takes several days. The expansion is also too small to allow a good fixation against the urethra. For the use after treatment of BPH with pressure and heat it would be desirable with high radial expansion rates of 2 to 3 times of the stent to get a good fixation.
In pending application PCT/EP01/05544 there is disclosed the use of a balloon catheter for the treatment of BPH by heat and pressure and a subsequent implantation of stent of a degradable material. The disclosure if this pending application is incorporated herein by reference.
According to one embodiment in said PCT/EP application the stent is constituted by a spiral produced from a straight filament and wound to a spiral with a large diameter and then wound in cold condition to a spiral of a small diameter for example 5 mm. Such a stent mounted on a balloon catheter expands by itself by heating to a diameter depending of the temperature, for example to 12 mm at a temperature of 50° C. (p. 20, col. 12-29).
Further trials have however shown that there are several drawbacks related to this embodiment. The expansion of the stent starts from the two end coils of the stent, which rotate in opposite direction and continue coil by coil. The expansion is counteracted by the friction between the balloon and the coils and the friction increases with increased number of coils. The expansion is therefore slow and does not allow the expansion of longer stents or stents with large expansion rates. Yet another drawback is that if a large expansion is desired the stent will shorten considerably.
The main object of the present invention is to provide a balloon catheter for the implantation of a stent in a mammalian duct of cavity. The term “mammalian” is intended to cover implantation on humans.
Another object of the invention is to provide a balloon catheter capable of implantation of a stent in a mammalian duct or cavity so that the stent will reach a correct position and remain in this position as implanted after removal of the catheter per se.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a method for safe implantation of a stent in a human prostatic urethra using a balloon catheter according to the invention.
A further object of the invention is to provide a balloon catheter for the implantation of a stent and a method associated therewith, said catheter being provided with a positioning balloon attached at the front end of the catheter for correct positioning of the catheter before the implantation of the stent.
Another object of the invention is to provide a balloon catheter for the implantation of a stent, wherein outwardly directed pressure is combined with heating for the fixation by local expansion of the stent.
A further object of the invention is to provide a balloon catheter for the implantation of a stent and a method associated therewith, wherein a heated fluid is introduced and circulated under pressure through the balloon for the expansion and fixation of the stent, thereby avoiding uncontrolled spillage of the hot fluid in the mammalian duct.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a balloon catheter capable of implantation of a stent having inherent memory properties.
A further object of the invention is to provide a tubular spiral stent with means for easy removal of the stent when implanted in a mammalian duct or cavity.
Accordingly, a first aspect of the invention is the provision of a balloon catheter for the implantation of a stent in a mammalian duct or cavity, said catheter comprising an elongated distal section and an expandable first balloon accommodating said section, further comprising means for the supply of a pressure medium for the expansion of said balloon, and means for heating said pressure medium, the catheter being provided with an elongated stent mounted onto said balloon. The catheter further comprises second means for establishing outwardly directed local expansion of the stent at a site or location selected from the two ends of the stent, so that the stent will remain in position as implanted after removal of the catheter from the implantation site.
It is preferred that said second means is constituted by said stent being shorter than the expandable part of said balloon so as to provide for local expansion of said stent at least at one end thereof.
A second aspect of the invention resides in a balloon catheter wherein a sleeve is placed between the balloon and the stent.
A third aspect of the invention resides in a balloon catheter, wherein said sleeve and said stent form an assembly.
A fourth aspect of the invention resides in the use of a stent having memory properties for assistance of its local expansion.
A fifth aspect of the invention resides in a method for the implantation of a stent in a human prostatic urethra using a balloon catheter having a balloon for positioning in the urethra, comprising the steps:
a) applying a stent of selected length capable of local radial expansion in a predetermined axial position onto said balloon;
b) inserting the catheter thus prepared into said urethra for positioning the stent therein;
c) distending the balloon by introducing a heated pressurized fluid therein to expand the stent at one or both ends thereof so as to keep the stent in position in said urethra;
d) removing fluid from the balloon and withdrawing the catheter from the urethra leaving the stent in position as implanted.
A sixth aspect of the invention resides in a method combining treatment of a prostate by heat and subsequent implantation of a stent, said method using a balloon catheter having a treatment balloon matching the relevant treatment zone and also having a distal positioning balloon to be placed in the urinary bladder, comprising the followings steps:
1) measuring the relevant treatment length of said urethra;
2) introducing the catheter into said urethra;
3) expanding said positioning balloon and retracting the catheter to engagement of said balloon against the bladder wall to obtain correct position of the treatment balloon;
4) distending the treatment balloon by introducing a heated pressurized fluid therein to provide dilation and heat treatment of the prostate urethra;
5) deflating both balloons and retracting the catheter from the urethra;
6) while using the same catheter, applying a stent of a selected length capable of local radial expansion in a predetermined axial position onto said treatment balloon;
7) inserting the catheter thus prepared into said urethra;
8) expanding said positioning balloon and retracting the catheter to engagement of said balloon against the bladder neck to obtain correct position of the treatment balloon;
9) distending the treatment balloon by introducing a heated pressurized fluid therein to expand the stent at a site or location selected from the two ends of the stent so as to keep the stent in position in said urethra; and
10) removing fluid from the balloons and withdrawing the catheter from the urethra leaving the stent in position as implanted.
Further features and details of the balloon catheter according to the present invention are clear from the dependent further claims as appended hereto.
In this disclosure the expressions “distal” and “proximal” are used with the meaning “front” and “rear”, respectively, i.e. related to the operator of the catheter. Furthermore, by the expression “at a site or location selected from the two ends of the stent” is meant one or both ends of the stent.
The invention will in the following be further described by exemplifying embodiments which, however, must not be construed to restrict the scope of protection except as defined in the appended claims. These embodiments are described with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
a, 1b show two different configurations of a stent operating in accordance with the present invention;
a-8d show more in detail the progression of expansion of one end of a stent;
a and 10b illustrate diagrammatically two subsequent steps of treatment of a prostate by heat and subsequent implantation of a stent;
The material can be a recovery memory metal, such as Nitinol®. In this case the wire is first wound around a tool with the same configuration as is shown in
The material can also be a thermoplastic material in form of a non-degradable material or a biodegradable polymer, such as the copolymer of PGA and PLLA mentioned above. In the case of a polymer a memory effect can be used in the following manner.
The wire is first wound around a tool with the same configuration as is shown in
The outer diameter of stent 1 according to
The spiralshaped stent has many advantages. It is easy to manufacture and allows easy removal.
Trials have shown that the enlarged diameter of the ends after thermotherapy should be in the range of about 11-13 mm which means a doubling compared to the diameter of the non-expanded stent body.
For the insertion and expansion of the stent, according to
For the insertion and fixation of a stent according to the invention a spiralshaped stent is selected which has a length corresponding to the active length of the inflated treatment balloon 5. The length could be somewhat shorter than the distance between the sutures 6 and 7. The stent 1 is positioned symmetrically between the two sutures 6 and 7. To firmly hold the stent 1 in place the treatment balloon 4 is partially inflated with liquid. If a shorter stent is used the two ends 2 and 3 will form two small bulges 9 and 10, respectively. The device can now be introduced into the urethra and positioned with the help of the inflated positioning balloon as described in the above-mentioned pending application.
The liquid in the system is then fully pressurised and the circulation and heating started. As there is a small quantity of liquid in the system the heating-up time is short and could be less than one minute. When the temperature of the stent is somewhat higher than the transition temperature in the case of using a Nitinol® material or higher than the softening point or glass transition point in the case of using a polymeric material the expansion starts by rotation of the outer turns of the stent ends 2 and 3 and at the same time the diameter of these turns will increase. Examples of preferable temperatures are about 65 to 75° C. for a Nitinol® stent with a transition at about 45° C. The use of a closed system with the hot liquid for the expansion of the stent has also the advantage that there is no risk for damages caused by the uncontrolled spilling of the liquid in the urethra.
Due to pressure the hot balloon will also expand correspondingly and keep the rotating turns hot by heat conduction. The expansion will continue until the stent ends 2 and 3 have expanded to the configuration as shown in
It is an advantage if the two expanded ends 2 and 3 are equal in size and shape. Trials with the use of different shape memory materials, such as Nitinol® wires or polymers in the form of non-degradable materials have shown that at expansion by heat as described above the two ends expand equally.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention only one end of the stent is expanded. This can be achieved if the stent is positioned on the device as depicted in
The embodiments with a single expanded end has several advantages. One is that less shortening of the stent will occur. Another advantage is that only the proximal end 3 is memorised to expand. Consequently such a spiral stent can be cut to the desired length by cutting the distal end of the stent. Therefore a relatively long stent could be used and adapted to several stent lengths by cutting. The embodiments described above are particularly suitable for reinforced balloon catheters as disclosed in pending application PCT/EP01/05544 because there is no risk for bursts of the bulge because of the reinforcement.
For the mounting of a stent 1 shown with dotted lines sleeve 14 is first positioned over the deflated balloon and fixed to the catheter shaft 8 with the flexible flaps 17. The stent 1 is then positioned over the sleeve 14 with the proximal end 18 juxtaposed to the proximal end of the slits 16.
A detail of the arrangement is shown in
In
b, 8c and 8d show in sequences the simultaneous expansion at the end of the stent and the balloon 5. In
This embodiment has many advantages. One is that the stent can be delivered from the factory mounted on the sleeve forming one single unit.
a and 10b illustrate diagrammatically the two subsequent steps of treatment of a prostate by heat (
As described above the physician first selects a balloon of appropriate length for the heat treatment, the length corresponding to that of the treatment zone depicted X1. This length can for example correspond to the distance from the bladder neck to the veru montanum. The distance between the proximal end of treatment zone and the recess 28 on shaft 8 is depicted L in
As an alternative for the implantation of a stent after a heat treatment of any kind one can provide a simple balloon catheter with a stent sleeve assembly, wherein a fluid, such as water, is externally heated. The heated fluid is introduced, such as by a syringe, into a central catheter tube causing expansion of the balloon and the stent, such as by a restricted outlet. During the expansion of the stent by the hot fluid it will leave the catheter via said outlet. This procedure will take only about 30 seconds as the fluid is preheated. By using a closed system of hot liquid expanding a balloon there is no risk for spilling liquid causing damages.
As described above the stent end rotates at extension thereof (
It is to be noted that many variations of the invention as described are conceivable and within the skill of the artisan, and the invention is to be limited solely by the scope of the appendid claims. Thus, for example, different positioning means can be used, for the correct placement of catheter and stent. Instead of the use of a positioning balloon other means known in the art can be used, such as ultrasound.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0401708-3 | Jun 2004 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE05/00869 | 6/9/2005 | WO | 12/27/2006 |