The present invention relates to a catheter system for explanting an intracardiac medical device.
Particularly, the disclosure relates to a cutting-tip-enabled catheter system for explanting an anatomically-encapsulated intracardiac medical device, particularly an intracardiac pacing system, e.g. a leadless pacemaker.
Present market offerings for bradycardia support are increasingly pointing attention to the reduced, overall patient care risk profile touted by leadless pacemaker systems as compared to traditional, pocket-based formats. This revised support modality employs small, self-contained pulse generators that are anchored (e.g. via tine-based structures) within the heart's blood volume to administer therapy. Such designs have, thus far, leaned on the use of primary cell power support and nominal targeted service times of around 10 years.
Given their long-duration residence within the patient's body, it is common for auto-immune responses to motivate anatomical encapsulation of, at least portions of, the implanted device. This encapsulation response challenges the clinical capacity for device explantation at the end of service as simple lasso/snare-based catheter systems cannot readily combat the increased device/physiology entanglement as compared to acute retrieval/explantation needs.
Presently, companies that offer implantable leadless pacer systems have provided tooling support for device implantation and, at best, marginal or configurable support for acute device retrieval. Such acute device support typically leans on the use of the implantation catheter or the adaptation of such a system through its pairing with compatible retrieval snares. In scenarios serviced by such acute device support, no gross autoimmune patient response is involved which means there are no substantially confounding anatomical conditions in effect to mandate compensatory procedural manipulations and/or mechanical interactions with the implant. As such, managing the device encapsulation, associated with chronically implanted conditions, has been left out of scope for catheter-based systems made available by leadless device manufacturers and thus represents an undersupported need.
This undersupport for chronic device explantation has arisen as a nearer term concern than many in the leadless pacer market might have hoped due to battery complications that have shortened product lifetimes. In some cases, the product lifetimes have been reduced to less than half of the nominal 10 year duration—a reduction sufficient enough to allow for encapsulation, creating special needs for appropriate management.
There is no consensus on how to best manage implants once their primary cells are no longer able to provide therapy. Some clinicians have discussed leaving the devices in place and simply installing additional devices to enable replacement support therapies. Others have pointed to the possible use of acute explantation tools in cases where device encapsulation (in a given patient) is not severe.
In cases where an expired implant is not removed from the patient's body and additional devices are installed to provide replacement therapy, the patient accumulates an increasing quantity of in-body hardware as a function of time. This added hardware can interfere with the nominal operation of the heart through modified compliance of the heart tissue, and reductions in the overall functional heart chamber blood volume. As a result of the limited flexibilities available for placing long cylindrical devices in but a handful of locations in support of viable interfacing with the patient's conduction system, optimal placement of subsequent implants additionally proves challenging. Such conditions can lead to the further progression of disease states, compromised oxygenation of tissues in the periphery, and the need for higher pacing thresholds (and hence shorter service times) in subsequent implants. Further, it cannot be guaranteed that multiple devices “banging into one another” in the heart will not create complications for the new device, cause anchoring erosion, or other possible deleterious effects.
Using acute explantation catheters to try and perform chronic explantation demands alignment with optimal patient conditions. Such an approach is only viable if the patient's auto-immune response does not motivate substantial encapsulation. There is no known means to improve the likelihood that a patient would not have an encapsulation response. In addition, there is no readily known method for determining a device encapsulation state when the therapy support needs replacing. Such a shortcoming typically means that the clinician has to access the patient's vasculature and then “try out” the acute explantation tooling in hopes that they are lucky enough to have found a patient where gross implant encapsulation is not in effect.
International Publication No. WO 2017/065846 A1 describes an engagement subassembly of a catheter, for retrieving an implanted medical device. Particularly, the system may also include an outer sheath which includes a cutting distal-most edge.
Further, International Publication No. WO 2018/204753 A1 discloses catheter systems for delivery and retrieval of leadless pacemakers that may include a retriever that can include a pair of lumens through which snare wires are passed to tighten around a docking projection of the leadless pacemaker.
The present disclosure is directed toward overcoming one or more of the above-mentioned problems, though not necessarily limited to embodiments that do.
Based on the above, a problem to be solved by the present invention is to offer support for the separation of intracardiac medical devices, particularly leadless pacers, from surrounding physiologic encapsulation stemming from chronic implantation. Particularly, a further objective is to facilitate said support using a catheter-based system that introduces minimal (and ideally no) use-based complexity beyond systems used for implantation and/or acute explantation, and/or to facilitate said support by extracting as much of the surrounding device encapsulation to offer the cleanest heart wall interior and hence avoid confounding follow-on attempts to place new devices.
At least the above-stated problem is solved by a catheter system having the features of claim 1. Further embodiments are stated in the corresponding sub claims and are described below.
In one aspect, a catheter system for explanting an intracardiac medical device (also denoted as implant) is disclosed. The catheter system comprises:
Particularly, the present disclosure provides a catheter system that enables a means for viably and safely separating an intracardiac medical device along with its encapsulating tissue in-growth from surrounding patient anatomy.
Furthermore, even when deployed, the cutting element (or the individual cutting knife) is not exposed outside of the catheter tip/implant protector cup. Such a design facilitates the slicing of tissue only when it has been drawn internal to the catheter tip and when it is bound between knife edges and the implant body. This safety feature enables a safe means for severing such tissue without presenting undue risk for unintended patient harm.
According to an embodiment, the catheter system comprises a lasso for establishing a lasso-based (or tethered) linkage to the intracardiac medical device.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the catheter system comprises an alignment tube for tightening the lasso.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the catheter system comprises a ramping element (e.g. an alignment cup) on a distal end of the alignment tube for centering the catheter tip about the recaptured intracardiac medical device.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the distal catheter tip is formed by a protector cup configured to be moved along the lasso-based linkage to the intracardiac medical device to surround both the implant and its surrounding encapsulation.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the cutting element comprises a series of deployable cutting knives also denoted as knife-tipped features that when not deployed extend along a long axis of the catheter tip but when deployed point inward to sever encapsulation tissue. Particularly, for severing the encapsulation tissue, the catheter tip, particularly the entire catheter, is configured to be rotated about the long axis of the catheter tip. Therefore, particularly, the cutting knives are configured to cut the encapsulation tissue along a circumferential direction of the intracardiac medical device.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the respective cutting knife is formed by a finger having a preformed tip, wherein a preformed condition of the tip is suppressed by features internal to the catheter until the tip is intentionally deployed by the explanting clinician.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the catheter tip comprises an inner and an outer material layer forming said features internal to the catheter, wherein the respective cutting knife is configured to be moved between the outer and the inner material layer from a proximal position to a distal position along the long axis of the catheter tip with respect to the catheter tip so that the preformed condition of the tip is suppressed by the inner and the outer material layer.
According to an embodiment, the inner material layer comprises an opening such that when the inner material layer is rotated about the long axis of the catheter tip when the respective cutting knife resides in the distal position, the preformed tip of the respective cutting knife comes into the region of the opening of the inner material layer and is thereby released so that the tip can assume the preformed condition in which the tip of the respective cutting knife points inwards through said opening of the inner material layer.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the cutting element comprises grabber elements configured to be deployed to aid in the retention of removed encapsulation and/or the intracardiac medical device, particularly for removing the latter.
According to an embodiment, each grabber element resides on a different finger of the cutting element.
Furthermore, according to an alternative embodiment, each grabber element resides on an independent finger of the cutting element that does not form a cutting knife and is configured to be moved between the outer and the inner material layer from a proximal position to a distal position along the long axis of the catheter tip with respect to the catheter tip.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the respective grabber element is configured to be one of: always deployed during said movement from the proximal position to the distal position and/or upon said rotation; deployed prior to deployment of the cutting knives; deployed in coordination with the deployment of the cutting knives; deployed simultaneously to the deployment of the cutting knives; deployed after the deployment of the cutting knives.
Furthermore, according to an embodiment, the respective grabber element is a preformed bulged section of the respective finger, wherein the preformed condition of the respective grabber element is suppressed by the inner and the outer material layer when the corresponding finger is moved from the proximal position to the distal position, and/or wherein when the inner material layer is rotated about the long axis of the catheter tip when the respective cutting knife resides in the distal position, the respective grabber element comes into the region of the opening of the inner material layer and is thereby released so that the respective grabber element can assume the preformed condition in which the respective grabber element bulges inwards through said opening of the inner material layer.
Furthermore, according to an alternative embodiment, the respective grabber element is a bulged section of the corresponding finger, wherein the bulged section engages with an opening formed in the outer material layer when the respective finger is moved from the proximal position to the distal position and/or rotated about the long axis of the catheter tip when the respective finger resides in the distal position, and/or wherein the respective bulged section is pressed against the outer layer when the corresponding finger is retracted from the distal position to the proximal position so that the respective grabber element bulges inwards and is thereby deployed.
According to a further aspect, a method for explanting an intracardiac medical device is disclosed, wherein the method uses a catheter system according to the present disclosure, and wherein the method comprising the steps of:
Additional features, aspects, objects, advantages, and possible applications of the present disclosure will become apparent from a study of the exemplary embodiments and examples described below, in combination with the Figures and the appended claims.
In the following, embodiments as well as further aspects, features and advantages of the present invention are described with reference to the Figures, wherein
One embodiment employs a catheter-based system comprising a catheter 10 with a series of retractable cutting knives 21 at its distal tip 11 as e.g. shown in
After having placed the alignment cup 6 on the proximal end 2a of the implant, an implant protector cup forming the distal tip 11 of the catheter 10 then tracks along the newly established lasso-based linkage 40 to the implant 2 to surround not only the implant 2 but also an encapsulation tissue 3 that has grown around the implant 2 (c.f. steps E to F in
Once the intracardiac medical device 2 is recaptured with the lasso 4 (steps B to D) and covered with the protector cup 11 (steps E to F), a series of retractable cutting knives 21 is deployed (cf. step G in
With the implant 2 reconnected to the catheter system 1, a structure 110, 111 internal to the catheter 10 facilitates the deployment of a series of knife-tipped features/cutting knives 21 (step G in
Upon deployment, these knives 21 pierce into the encapsulation tissue 3 near the anchored terminus of the implant (e.g. leadless pacer) 2. Subsequent rotation of the entire catheter system by X degrees causes the tips 22 of the knives 21 to then slice around the bottom end of the encapsulation tissue 3, cleanly separating it from the heart wall T (step H in
The example embodiments shown in
Once the capsule 2 has been separated, the cutting features internal to the catheter 10 are withdrawn distally in coordination with the cinch/alignment tube 5 while the implant protector cup 11 remains in a stable position (step I in
Details associated with the cutting elements 20 internal to the distal tip 11 of the catheter 10 are shown in
The embodiments shown in
Particularly, while
Again, the number of cutting knifes 21 within the distal tip 11 of the catheter 10 could be greater or fewer than the illustrative three shown in each of the depictions in
As pointed to in
In all the depictions shown, the blades stay deployed while all retraction processes occur as a means to enable proper retention of the removed capsule. This condition is not necessarily mandated but would require any in-tip “grabbers” to do all the work in holding onto the removed encapsulation if the tips were allowed to separate from the implant body as the device, the capsule, and the device anchor were withdrawn into the capsule.
Through the modification of the finger geometries within the cutting apparatus and the cutouts or openings 110a, 111a within the stacked material layers 110, 111 found at the distal tip 11 of the catheter 10, the behaviors of the knives and grabbers can differ.
Particularly, according to
Furthermore, as shown in
Furthermore,
In contrast,
Finally,
According to further aspects, the catheter system can comprise one or several of the following features, either alone or in any combination with each other:
Potential advantages of the inventive solution:
The features disclosed in regard with the system may also apply to a method for explanting an intracardiac pacing system and vice versa.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous modifications and variations of the described examples and embodiments are possible in light of the above teachings of the disclosure. The disclosed examples and embodiments are presented for purposes of illustration only. Other alternate embodiments may include some or all of the features disclosed herein. Therefore, it is the intent to cover all such modifications and alternate embodiments as may come within the true scope of this invention, which is to be given the full breadth thereof. Additionally, the disclosure of a range of values is a disclosure of every numerical value within that range, including the end points.
This application is the United States national phase under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of PCT International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2019/075130, filed on Sep. 19, 2019, which claims the benefit of U.S. Patent Application No. 62/746,569, filed on Oct. 17, 2018, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/075130 | 9/19/2019 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62746569 | Oct 2018 | US |