This disclosure relates to heart valve repair, such as mitral valve repair.
Some patient conditions can produce valvular insufficiency or regurgitation.
Valvular insufficiency or regurgitation occurs when a valve in a heart of a subject does not close completely, allowing blood to flow backwards (e.g., from the left ventricle to the left atrium), which may adversely impact the functionality of the heart.
The mitral valve includes two leaflets (anterior and posterior) attached to an annulus (e.g., a fibrous ring). In a healthy heart, the mitral valve leaflets close, or coapt, during contraction of the left ventricle and prevent blood from flowing back into the left atrium. Mitral valve regurgitation is a condition in which the leaflets of a mitral valve of a subject do not coapt properly and, as a result, blood regurgitates back into the left atrium from the left ventricle. The regurgitation of blood back into the left atrium may result in a reduced ejection volume from the left ventricle, causing the heart of the subject to work relatively hard to supply the desirable volume of blood to the body. Mitral regurgitation may occur because of different patient conditions. For example, secondary mitral regurgitation, also referred to as functional mitral regurgitation, may occur when a left ventricle dilates and causes dilation of the mitral annulus of a subject.
In some aspects, this disclosure describes example coaptation zone curtains, systems, and techniques for repairing a heart valve, such as, but not limited to, a mitral valve. The coaptation zone curtains, systems, and techniques support coaptation between valve leaflets and may help reduce valvular insufficiency or regurgitation.
In some examples, the disclosure describes a medical device that includes a frame configured to substantially conform to a curvature of a coaptation zone of at least two valve leaflets of a cardiac or vascular valve; and a curtain configured to be attached to the frame and extend into the coaptation zone to support coaptation of the at least two valve leaflets.
In some examples, the disclosure describes a medical device system that includes a delivery device configured to access vasculature of a patient and a medical device. The medical device includes a frame configured to substantially conform to a curvature of a coaptation zone of at least two valve leaflets of a cardiac or vascular valve and a curtain configured to be attached to the frame and extend into the coaptation zone to support coaptation of the at least two valve leaflets. The delivery device is configured to deliver the coaptation zone curtain to the coaptation zone of the cardiac or vascular valve so that the curtain extends between the at least two valve leaflets.
In some examples, the disclosure describes a method that includes advancing a delivery device through vasculature of a patient to a vascular or cardiac treatment site. The delivery device includes a lumen housing a coaptation zone curtain. The coaptation zone curtain includes a frame configured to substantially conform to a curvature of a coaptation zone of at least two valve leaflets of a cardiac or vascular valve and a curtain configured to be attached to the frame and extend into the coaptation zone to support coaptation of the at least two valve leaflets. The method also includes releasing the coaptation zone curtain from the lumen to the coaptation zone of the cardiac or vascular valve so that the curtain extends between the at least two valve leaflets.
The details of one or more examples are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of examples according to this disclosure will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
This disclosure describes devices, systems, and techniques for repairing a heart valve, such as, but not limited to, a mitral valve. The coaptation zone curtains, systems, and techniques support coaptation of valve leaflets of the heart valve, e.g., help provide better (e.g., more effective) coaptation of the valve leaflets, which may help and may help reduce valvular insufficiency or regurgitation for a particular patient. For example, the coaptation zone curtains may be configured to increase a length over which the valve leaflets coapt, which may provide more effective coaptation of the valve leaflets. Coaptation zone curtains may include a frame and a curtain attached to the frame. In some examples, a coaptation zone curtain also may include at least one of an alignment marker, a barb configured to engage tissue, or at least one anchor. The frame may be configured to engage with tissue of an annulus of the heart valve, a trigone of the heart valve, and/or a valve leaflet to position the curtain within the coaptation zone, and may be formed from a wire, cut sheet (e.g., a laser-cut sheet of material), or the like. The curtain may be configured to extend into the coaptation zone, increase a coaptation length between the valve leaflets, and provide support to the coaptation zone.
The left atrium LA receives oxygenated blood from the lungs via the pulmonary veins and pumps the oxygenated blood through the mitral valve MV and into the left ventricle LV during ventricular diastole. The left ventricle LV contracts during systole and blood flows outwardly through the aortic valve AV, into the aorta and to the remainder of the body. In a healthy heart, the leaflets LF of the native mitral valve MV meet evenly at the free edges or “coapt” to close and prevent back flow of blood into the left atrium LA during contraction of the left ventricle LV. The tissue of the leaflets LF attach to the surrounding heart structure via a dense fibrous ring of connective tissue called an annulus AN. The flexible tissue of the leaflets LF of the native mitral valve MV are connected to papillary muscles PM, which extend upwardly from the lower wall of the left ventricle LV and the interventricular septum IVS, via branching tendons called chordae tendinae CT.
Mitral valve regurgitation is a condition in which the leaflets of a mitral valve of a subject do not coapt properly and, as a result, blood regurgitates back into the left atrium LA from the left ventricle LV. The regurgitation of blood back into the left atrium LA may result in a reduced ejection volume from the left ventricle LV, causing the heart of the subject to work relatively hard to supply the desirable volume of blood to the body. Mitral regurgitation may occur because of one or more patient conditions. For example, secondary mitral regurgitation, also referred to as functional mitral regurgitation, may occur when the left ventricle LV dilates and causes dilation of the mitral annulus of a subject. The leaflets LF of the valves may move apart as a result of the dilation of the left ventricle LV, which may adversely impact the ability of the leaflets to properly coapt.
In addition to or instead of being caused by dilation of the left ventricle LV, mitral valve regurgitation (or other valve regurgitation) may be caused by calcified plaque buildup in heart 10. For example, the leaflets LF of the valves (e.g., aortic valve AV or mitral valve MV) may harden and may not sufficiently coapt or meet, such that regurgitation may occur where the valve does not close completely, allowing blood to flow backwards (e.g., from the left ventricle LV to the left atrium LA). The left side of heart 10 (e.g., mitral valve MV and aortic valve AV) can be more likely to become calcified because of the higher pressures generated.
In addition to or instead of being caused by dilation of the left ventricle LV or calcified plaque build-up, mitral valve regurgitation (or other valve regurgitation) may be caused leaflet perforation, vegetation, tear, chordae tendineae rupture and elongation, papillary muscles rupture and elongation, and ventricle infarction.
The medical devices, systems, and techniques described herein may be used to repair a valve of heart 10 via a minimally invasive medical procedure, e.g., via a transcatheter medical procedure that is less invasive than open heart surgery. While open heart surgeries, such as annuloplasty performed via open heart surgery, may have positive outcomes, a more minimally invasive medical procedure may also have positive outcomes while also being associated with a shorter recovery time for some patients compared to open heart surgery.
Although example devices, systems, and techniques are primarily described herein with reference to the mitral valve MV, in other examples, the example devices, systems, and techniques may be used to repair other valves in heart 10.
The coaptation zone curtains of the current disclosure may be configured to provide mechanical support to coaptation zone 20 and increase coaptation length 30 between anterior leaflet 22 and posterior leaflet 24. In this way, the coaptation zone curtains of the current disclosure may help increase heart valve leaflet coaptation, which may reduce or even eliminate mitral regurgitation. In some examples, a coaptation zone curtain includes a curtain that is configured to extend between the at least two valve leaflets of a valve in order to increase the coaptation length 30 between the leaflets.
Frame 32 may include a biocompatible material. In some examples, frame 32 is configured to substantially maintain its shape under forces experienced by frame 32 once frame 32 is deployed in heart 10 (
In some examples, frame 32 may have a pre-set shape. For example, the pre-set shape may be defined using a heat treatment. The pre-set shape is a shape toward which frame 32 recovers in the absence of an applied force. In some examples, the pre-set shape may substantially conform to curvature of at least a portion of coaptation zone 20. The pre-set shape of frame 32 also may be configured to extend curtain 34 into the coaptation zone between at least two valves (e.g., coaptation zone 20 of
Curtain 34 is attached to frame 32 using any suitable technique. For example, curtain 34 may be sewn to frame 32. As other examples, curtain may be one or more of adhered, clipped or welded to frame 32. Curtain 34 may be attached to frame 32 at a position such that curtain 34 extends into coaptation zone 20 when frame 32 is positioned contacting tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve. For example, curtain 34 may extend into the portion of coaptation zone 20 indicated by coaptation length 30. Curtain 34 may be configured to provide a surface against which valve leaflets LF (
Curtain 34 may include any suitable biocompatible material. In some examples, curtain 34 may include a porous material. In other examples, curtain 34 may include a substantially non-porous material. Curtain 34 may include at least one of pericardial tissue, a biocompatible polymer, or a biocompatible fabric.
In some examples, coaptation zone curtain 31 (e.g., frame 32) may include at least one barb 36. At least one barb 36 may be configured to engage tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve, such as annulus AN (
In some examples, coaptation zone curtain 31 (e.g., frame 32) may include at least one alignment marker 38. At least one alignment marker 38 may be configured to facilitate alignment of frame 32 with coaptation zone 20. At least one alignment marker 38 may be integrally formed with frame 32 or may be formed separately and attached to frame 32 (e.g., welded, adhered, mechanically connected, or the like). In some examples, at least one alignment marker 38 may be adjacent at least one barb 36 to help align the at least one barb 38 with a trigone or with annulus AN. Coaptation zone curtain 31 may include any number of alignment markers 38, such as at least one, at least two, two, or the like.
Returning to
In other examples, a frame may have a different shape.
Frame 52 shown in
Frame 62 shown in
Frame 72 shown in
Although not shown in
In some examples, a coaptation zone curtain may be anchored to tissue of heart 10 (
In some examples, the at least one anchor includes a helix 90, as shown in
The at least one anchor may include a biocompatible material that is configured to engage the frame. In some examples, the at least one anchor may include a biocompatible metal or alloy, such as nitinol, stainless steel, a cobalt-chromium alloy, or the like. In some instances, the at least one anchor may include a biocompatible shape memory alloy.
The coaptation zone curtains described herein may be delivered to the coaptation zone using a delivery device.
Catheter 114 is also configured to deploy coaptation zone curtain 112 in position proximate coaptation zone 20 (
In some examples, delivery device 110 additionally may include a balloon catheter 118 that includes an expandable balloon 120. Coaptation zone curtain 112 may be folded, wrapped, or crimped around expandable balloon 120 when expandable balloon 120 is in a folded or retracted state. Coaptation zone curtain 112 and expandable balloon catheter 118 may be advanced through lumen 116 of catheter 114 and out a distal exit of lumen 116. Once coaptation zone curtain 112 and expandable balloon 120 are released from lumen 116 and adjacent the desired position for coaptation zone curtain 112, expandable balloon 120 may be expanded as shown in
In other examples, the frame (e.g., frame 32 of
Delivery device 110 also may be used by a clinician to engage at least one barb
In some examples, rather than a frame of a coaptation zone curtain having a substantially two-dimensional (e.g., planar) shape, the frame may have a three-dimensional shape.
A delivery device (e.g., delivery device 110 of
In some examples, the treatment site may include the mitral valve, and delivery device 110 may be advanced to the left atrium. In other examples, the treatment site may include another heart valve. Delivery device 110 may access the left atrium trans-septally, trans-aortically, or trans-apically. In some examples, delivery device 110 may be tracked over a guide wire, through a guide catheter, or the like as delivery device 110 is advanced to the treatment site. Delivery device 110 may include one or more radiological markers at or near a distal end of delivery device 110 to assist the clinician in visualizing delivery device 110 as delivery device 110 is advanced to the treatment site.
Once delivery device 110 (e.g., a distal portion of delivery device 110) has been advance to the treatment site, delivery device 110 may release coaptation zone curtain 30, including frame 32 and curtain 34 (154). For example, a clinician may manipulate delivery device 110 to release coaptation zone curtain 30 from a lumen of delivery device 110 to engage with at least a portion of a coaptation zone (e.g., coaptation zone 20 of
In some examples, delivery device 110 may include a balloon catheter, as described above with respect to
The following clause illustrate example subject matter described herein.
Clause 1. A medical device comprising: a frame configured to substantially conform to a curvature of a coaptation zone of at least two valve leaflets of a cardiac or vascular valve; and a curtain configured to be attached to the frame and extend into the coaptation zone to support coaptation of the at least two valve leaflets.
Clause 2. The medical device of clause 1, wherein the frame comprises a biocompatible metal or alloy.
Clause 3. The medical device of clause 1 or 2, wherein the frame comprises a biocompatible shape memory alloy.
Clause 4. The medical device of clause 3, wherein the frame comprises a nickel-titanium alloy.
Clause 5. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 4, wherein the frame comprises a pre-set shape configured to substantially conform to the curvature of at least a portion of the coaptation zone.
Clause 6. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 5, wherein the frame defines a substantially two-dimensional shape.
Clause 7. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 5, wherein the frame defines a three-dimensional shape.
Clause 8. The medical device of clause 7, wherein at least one of a length of the frame, a depth of the frame, a width of the frame, a curvature of the frame, or a placement of the curtain are selected so that the curtain substantially fills a gap between the at least two valve leaflets and provides a sealing surface between the at least two valve leaflets.
Clause 9. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 8, wherein the frame further comprises at least one barb configured to engage tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve.
Clause 10. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 9, wherein the frame further comprises at least one alignment marker configured to facilitate alignment of the frame with the coaptation zone.
Clause 11. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 10, further comprising at least one anchor configured to anchor the frame to tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve.
Clause 12. The medical device of clause 11, wherein the at least one anchor comprises a helical coil, a conical helical coil, a double helical coil, or a hook.
Clause 13. The medical device of clause 11 or 12, wherein the at least one anchor comprises a biocompatible metal or alloy.
Clause 14. The medical device of any one of clauses 11 to 13, wherein the at least one anchor comprises an attachment feature configured to engage with the frame.
Clause 15. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 14, wherein the curtain comprises a biocompatible material.
Clause 16. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 15, wherein the curtain comprises porous material.
Clause 17. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 15, wherein the curtain comprises substantially non-porous material.
Clause 18. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 17, wherein the curtain comprises at least one of pericardial tissue, a biocompatible polymer, or a biocompatible fabric.
Clause 19. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 18, wherein the curtain is sewn to the frame.
Clause 20. The medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 19, wherein the cardiac or vascular valve comprises a mitral valve comprising a mitral annulus, an anterior valve leaflet, and a posterior valve leaflet.
Clause 21. A system comprising: a delivery device configured to access vasculature of a patient; and the medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 20, wherein the delivery device is configured to deliver the coaptation zone curtain to the coaptation zone of the cardiac or vascular valve so that the curtain extends between the at least two valve leaflets.
Clause 22. The system of clause 21, wherein the delivery device further comprises a balloon catheter comprising an expandable balloon, and wherein the coaptation zone curtain is disposed over the expandable balloon within a lumen of the delivery device.
Clause 23. The system of clause 22, wherein the expandable balloon is configured to deploy the coaptation zone curtain when the expandable balloon is actuated from an unexpanded state to an expanded state.
Clause 24. The system of any one of clauses 21 to 23, wherein the delivery device is configured to engage at least one anchor with the frame and tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve to anchor the coaptation zone curtain in place.
Clause 25. The system of any one of clauses 21 to 24, wherein the delivery device comprises a radiopaque marker adjacent to a distal end of the delivery device.
Clause 26. A method comprising: advancing a delivery device through vasculature of a patient to a vascular or cardiac treatment site, wherein the delivery device comprises a lumen housing a coaptation zone curtain, wherein the coaptation zone curtain comprises the medical device of any one of clauses 1 to 20; and releasing the coaptation zone curtain from the lumen to the coaptation zone of the cardiac or vascular valve so that the curtain extends between the at least two valve leaflets.
Clause 27. The method of clause 26, wherein the frame comprises a pre-set shape configured to substantially conform to the curvature of a coaptation zone, wherein the frame is in a deformed state within the lumen of the delivery device, and wherein the frame recovers toward the pre-set shape upon being released from the lumen.
Clause 28. The method of clause 26 or clause 27, wherein the frame further comprises at least one barb configured to engage tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve, and wherein releasing the coaptation zone curtain from the lumen comprises engaging the at least one barb with the tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve.
Clause 29. The method of any one of clauses 26 to 28, wherein the frame further comprises at least one alignment marker configured to facilitate alignment of the frame with the coaptation zone, and wherein releasing the coaptation zone curtain from the lumen comprises substantially aligning the frame with the coaptation zone.
Clause 30. The method of any one of clauses 26 to 29, further comprising at least one anchor configured to anchor the frame to tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve, and wherein releasing the coaptation zone curtain from the lumen comprises engaging the at least one anchor with the frame and the tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve.
Clause 31. The method of clause 30, wherein the at least one anchor comprises a helical coil, a conical helical coil, a double helical coil, or a hook.
Clause 32. The method of any one of clauses 30 or 31, wherein the at least one anchor comprises an attachment feature configured to engage with the frame, and wherein engaging the at least one anchor with the frame and the tissue of the cardiac or vascular valve comprises engaging the attachment feature with the frame.
Clause 33. The method of any one of clauses 26 to 32, further comprising attaching the curtain to the frame.
Clause 34. The method of clause 33, wherein attaching the curtain to the frame comprises sewing the curtain to the frame.
Clause 35. The method of clause 33, wherein attaching the curtain to the frame comprises at least one of adhering, clipping, or welding the curtain to the frame.
Clause 36. The method of any one of clauses 26 to 35, wherein the cardiac or vascular valve comprises a mitral valve comprising a mitral annulus, an anterior valve leaflet, and a posterior valve leaflet.
Clause 37. The method of any one of clauses 26 to 36, wherein releasing the coaptation zone curtain from the lumen comprises advancing a balloon catheter comprising an expandable balloon from the lumen, wherein the coaptation zone curtain is disposed over the expandable balloon within the lumen of the delivery device.
Clause 38. The method of clause 37, wherein releasing the coaptation zone curtain from the lumen further comprises expanding the expandable balloon to deploy the coaptation zone curtain.
Various examples have been described. These and other examples are within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/779,284, filed on Dec. 13, 2018, the entire content of which is incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62779284 | Dec 2018 | US |