The present invention relates to a disposable device for the continuous centrifugal separation of a physiological liquid, particularly blood, comprising a fixed axial input and output element about the axis of which a plastic centrifuging chamber is mounted such that it can rotate, an inlet pipe for the blood that is to be spun in the centrifuge passing longitudinally through said axial inlet and outlet element, its delivery opening lying near the bottom of said centrifuging chamber, an outlet passage for at least one separated constituent, its inlet opening lying near the opposite end of said chamber to said bottom and in a region where at least one of the separated constituents that has the lowest specific mass becomes concentrated so that it can be drawn off continuously, this passage passing through a longitudinal portion of said fixed axial inlet and outlet element, a rotary seal between said fixed axial element and said centrifuging chamber.
Known separation buckets or bowls of this type are intended for semi-continuous separation, which entails gradually removing the plasma separated from the red blood cells and storing the red blood cells. The reason why the red blood cells are not removed from the separation chamber gradually as they become separated, as the plasma is, is because the tangential force applied to them is relatively high and the deceleration that would be experienced during a sudden transition into a fixed removal pipe would give rise to a high degree of hemolysis.
Bowls such as this are described in many patents, among which mention may be made of U.S. Pat. No. 4,300,717 in which they appeared for the first time.
In order to remedy the disadvantages of this type of bowl, a bowl system exhibiting a flexible tube for supplying and removing the separated constituents of the blood has been proposed.
The system used to nullify the effect of the rotation of the centrifuging chamber on the attachment of the flexible pipe to this chamber in centrifugal separators of this type is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,586,413. This makes it possible, by forming an open loop, one end of which is secured in terms of rotation to the axis of the centrifuging bowl that rotates at the velocity 2ω whereas its other end, coaxial with the first, is fixed while the open loop is driven at the velocity ω, to cause the flexible tube rotating about its own axis to turn at the velocity −ω, thus nullifying any torsion in the flexible tube.
This principle, which makes it possible to dispense with any seal between the flexible tube and the rotating member has been widely adopted in a great many centrifuging devices operating in continuous flow. This is because, unlike the case with centrifuges that have fixed feed and removal tubes, the separated components do not experience sudden deceleration in their tangential speed, which means that the risks of hemolysis are lower.
However, given the velocity at which the rotating member rotates in a centrifuge, the flexible tube rotating on itself at the velocity −ω is subjected to tensile stress caused by centrifugal force, to bending stress due to that portion of the tube that forms the open loop rotating on itself at the velocity −ω, and to heating caused by the work of the viscous forces in the material as a result of the aforementioned bending. Now, when it is blood that is being centrifuged, the temperature must not exceed 40° C.
As a result, the rate at which the centrifuging bowl rotates is limited, which means that the diameter of this bowl cannot be too small otherwise separation quality will be adversely affected. Furthermore, the mechanism used to drive the bowl and the flexible tube is relatively complicated and expensive.
Another proposal, found in JP 09 192215 and in EP 0 297 216, is centrifugal separators comprising a rigid bell-shaped conical centrifuging bowl which are fed and from which the separated components are removed by fixed pipes positioned in an upper axial opening of the bowl. Given the bell shape of these chambers, it is not possible to cause the liquid that is to be separated to flow. This is because the heaviest phase, the red blood cells, remains in the largest-diameter part of the cone frustum.
Because of this shape of chamber, in JP 09 192215, the red blood cells are drawn off by a pipe the inlet of which lies more or less mid-way up the chamber, using a complex network of internal baffles. By contrast, the plasma is drawn off using this same complex network of baffles, using a pipe the inlet of which lies near the top of the chamber. As for the chamber in EP 0 297 216, the red blood cells are extracted by suction through a pipe the inlet of which is adjacent to the bottom of the chamber.
It can thus be seen that the existing solutions are unable to provide a satisfactory answer to the need for a simple compact separator that is easy to use, that can be used with good-value disposable centrifuging chambers in which the blood that is to be processed resides for the shortest possible length of time and which are able to operate at a good delivery rate.
This is why it has become necessary to reevaluate the design of the separation device in order to be able more satisfactorily to meet the aforementioned requirements.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome the aforementioned disadvantages, at least in part.
To these ends, a subject of the present invention is a disposable device for the continuous centrifugal separation of a physiological liquid, particularly blood, comprising:
The main advantage of this disposable device is its small volume and the fact that it allows continuous separation with fixed feed and removal pipes. The small volume makes it possible to reduce the cost of the disposable device and therefore also the volume of the centrifugal separator. A centrifuging chamber that has a small volume makes it possible to reduce the length of time for which the liquid that is to be separated is subjected to the separation forces, and therefore reduce the level of hemolysis and platelet activation.
Advantageously, the tubular centrifuge receptacle has a cylindrical narrowing at its upper end, to engage with guide rollers and in which a rotary seal is housed between the fixed axial element and the receptacle so as to keep the liquid being centrifuged sterile.
The small diameter of the cylindrical narrowing makes it possible to reduce the tolerance on this diameter by reducing the amount of shrinkage of the plastic, this degree of shrinkage being proportional to the size of the part. The fact that the rotary seal also operates on a small-diameter part means that the amount of heating can be reduced. Furthermore, the precision with which the centrifuging device is guided means that the seal can be used only for sealing rather than also for compensating for eccentricity of the rotary centrifuging chamber with respect to the fixed axial inlet and outlet element. As a result, the preload to which the seal needs to be subjected can be reduced to the minimum, that is to say that it is now dependent only on the conditions needed for sealing and therefore no longer constitutes a hybrid component, thus also making it possible to reduce the degree of heating.
Other specific features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent in the light of the description which follows and with the aid of the attached drawings which, schematically and by way of example, illustrate two embodiments of the disposable device for continuous centrifugal separation.
The housing of the centrifugal separator intended to use the device according to the present invention and illustrated schematically by
Two outlet pipes 8, 9 are connected to the fixed axial element 4 to allow the continuous delivery of two constituents that have different densities of the physiological liquid. In the case of blood, the outlet pipe 8 is intended for delivering concentrated red blood cells RBC and the pipe 9 is intended for delivering platelet rich plasma PRP. This outlet pipe 9 comprises a valve 11 and splits into two branches 9a/9b. The branch 9a is used to collect the platelet concentrate and is controlled by a valve 12. The valves 11 and 12 operate using exclusive OR logic either to pass the PRP from the chamber 1 to the chamber 2 or to empty the platelet concentrate from chamber 2 to the outlet 9a. The branch 9b is used to lead the PRP to a pumping device 13 comprising two pumps 14 and 15 phase-shifted by 180° and used to provide a continuous feed to the second tubular centrifuging chamber 2 through a feed tube 16 connected to a fixed axial element 17 of the second tubular centrifuging chamber 2. An outlet pipe 24 for the platelet poor plasma PPP is also connected to the fixed axial element 17.
The upper end of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1 comprises a cylindrical axial guide element 1b of a diameter appreciably smaller than that of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1, projecting on its upper face. The cylindrical face of this element 1b is intended to engage with three centering rollers 21 that can be seen in particular in
The land between the cylindrical axial guide element 1b and the upper end of the tubular chamber 1 is used, in collaboration with the centering rollers 21, as an axial end stop, preventing the drive shaft of the motor 20 from becoming uncoupled from the axial recess in the tubular element 1a projecting underneath the bottom of the tubular chamber 1.
Advantageously, the axes of rotation of the guide rollers 21 could also be inclined slightly by a few angular degrees, <2°, in respective planes tangential to a circle coaxial with the axis of rotation of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1 passing through the respective axes of rotation of the three rollers, in a direction chosen according to the direction in which the rollers rotate, in which these rollers apply a downward force on the tubular chamber 1.
An elastic centering and attachment element 23 for centering and attaching the fixed axial inlet and outlet element 4 of the tubular centrifuging chamber is secured to the horizontal upper part 18b of the support 18. This element 23 has two symmetrical elastic branches, of semicircular shape, each of which ends in an outwardly curved part intended to transmit to these elastic branches forces that allow them to separate from one another when the fixed axial inlet and outlet element 4 is introduced laterally between them.
As can be seen, all the elements for positioning and guiding the fixed and rotary parts of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1 are secured to the support 18 so that the precision is dependent on the precision of the support 18 itself, which can be manufactured with very tight tolerances especially since it is not a part that is complicated to manufacture. The other factors which contribute to guaranteeing good precision are the relatively long axial distance, due to the elongate tubular shape of the centrifuging chamber, between the lower guide and the upper guide. Finally, the fact that the cylindrical guide surface 1b is a small diameter surface makes it possible to reduce, on the one hand, the errors due to the shrinkage of the injected plastic from which the centrifuging chambers 1, 2 are manufactured, the shrinkage being proportional to the size, contrary to the case of a machined component and, on the other hand, out-of-round errors.
This precision with which the tubular centrifuging chamber is guided makes it possible to form very thin flows over the side wall of this centrifuging chamber. That makes it possible to have a small volume of liquid residing in the chamber, which is a factor able to reduce the risk of hemolysis and the risk of platelet activation, this risk admittedly being dependent on the forces applied, but also being dependent on the length of time for which the components of the blood are subjected to these forces. Thus, it is not possible to set a force threshold, because for a given force, the risk of hemolysis may be practically zero over a certain period of time, whereas it may be far greater, for the same force, but over an appreciably longer period of time.
As a preference, the tubular centrifuging chambers will have a diameter ranging between 10 and 40 mm, preferably of 22 mm and will be driven at a rate of rotation ranging between 5 000 and 100 000 rpm, so that the tangential speed to which the liquid is subjected does not exceed 26 m/s. The axial length of the tubular centrifuging chamber advantageously ranges between 40 and 200 mm, and is preferably 80 mm. Parameters such as these give a liquid flow rate ranging between 20 and 400 ml/min (particularly for dialysis), preferably 60 ml/min, which corresponds to a liquid residence time within the tubular chamber of 5 to 60 s, preferably 15 s.
We shall now look in greater detail into the design of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1 intended to be associated with the centrifugal separator just described. It can be specified here that everything explained in the foregoing description with regard to the dimensions, drive, position and guidance of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1 also applies to the tubular centrifuging chamber 2. By contrast, since the latter has only an outlet 24 for the PPP, its internal design is simpler than that of the tubular chamber 1.
As illustrated by
It can be seen that the diameter against which the tubular seal 25 rubs is small and preferably <10 mm, so that the heating is limited to acceptable amounts. From the possible dimensions given hereinabove for the tubular centrifuging chamber, it can be seen that the axial distance between the upper and lower centering and guide means of this chamber is greater than five times the diameter of the cylindrical axial guide element 1b. Given the precision with which the tubular chamber 1 is guided and the precision that the relative positioning of the fixed axial inlet and outlet element 4 can achieve, the seal has practically no need to compensate for any eccentricity of the rotating tubular chamber 1, as it does in the aforementioned devices of the prior art which operate with semi-continuous flow. This also plays a part in reducing the heating of the rotating tubular seal 25 and therefore makes it possible to increase the rate of rotation of the tubular centrifuging chamber.
The fixed axial inlet and outlet element 4 comprises a tubular part 3a which extends the feed tube 3 connected to this fixed axial element 4 down close to the bottom of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1 towards which it can lead the blood or some other physiological liquid that needs to be separated.
The outlet pipes 8 and 9 connected to the fixed axial inlet and outlet element 4 each comprise an axial segment 8a and 9a respectively, which penetrates the tubular chamber and opens into that part of the fixed axial inlet and outlet element 4 that lies near the upper end of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1. The inlet end of each of these outlet pipes 8a, 9a is formed with a circular slot. Each of these slots is formed between two disks 28, 29 and 30, 31 respectively, which are secured to the fixed axial inlet and outlet element 4.
In this example, the radial distance between the edges of the disks 28, 29 and the side wall of the chamber 1 is less than the radial distance between the edges of the disks 30, 31 and this same side wall. Through this arrangement, the platelet rich plasma PRP, which is of lower density than the red blood cells RBC is sucked out into the outlet pipe 9 by the pumping device 13 (
As can be seen, the diameter of that part of the tubular centrifuging chamber 1 that lies in the PRP and RBC outlet region where the disks 28 to 31 are located is slightly larger than that of the rest of this tubular chamber 1 so as to increase the respective thicknesses of the layers of PRP and RBC to make them easier to extract separately.
A dead space is formed between the adjacent disks 29 and 30. Its purpose is to trap leucocytes, the density of which is somewhere between that of the RBCs and of the platelets, but which are very much larger in size than the RBCs and the platelets. The disk 30 comprises a filter 30a to separate the leucocytes from the plasma and trap only the leucocytes in the dead space between the disks 29 and 30.
The second embodiment of the tubular centrifuging chamber as illustrated in
This barrier 32 has three roles to play. One is that of creating a physical barrier between the circular PRP inlet opening situated between the disks 30 and 31 and the RBCs, so as to prevent any risk that disturbances caused by the suction at the inlet opening might cause the RBCs and the PRP to recombine. A second role is that of allowing the RBCs to be collected on the same diameter as the plasma, thus reducing the hemolysis because the edges of the disks 30, 31 that form the outlet opening for the RBCs are less fully immersed in the layer of RBCs because all the disks 28 to 31 are of the same diameter. Finally, the third role is that of at least partially holding the leucocytes back inside the cylindrical part 32a of the barrier 32.
The rest of this tubular centrifuging chamber 1 according to this second embodiment is practically similar to the first embodiment just described. A leucocyte-stripping filter similar to the filter 30a of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
05405038 | Jan 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/CH2006/000049 | 1/23/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/24/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/079238 | 8/3/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2963219 | Palmqvist et al. | Dec 1960 | A |
3073517 | Pickels et al. | Jan 1963 | A |
3317127 | Cole | May 1967 | A |
3401876 | Lucas | Sep 1968 | A |
3409213 | Latham, Jr. | Nov 1968 | A |
3565330 | Latham, Jr. | Feb 1971 | A |
3581981 | Latham, Jr. | Jun 1971 | A |
3706412 | Latham, Jr. | Dec 1972 | A |
3785549 | Latham, Jr. | Jan 1974 | A |
4140268 | Lacour | Feb 1979 | A |
4184524 | Lorenz | Jan 1980 | A |
4300717 | Latham, Jr. | Nov 1981 | A |
4684361 | Feldman et al. | Aug 1987 | A |
4692136 | Feldman et al. | Sep 1987 | A |
4767396 | Powers | Aug 1988 | A |
4859333 | Panzani | Aug 1989 | A |
4879031 | Panzani | Nov 1989 | A |
4943273 | Pages | Jul 1990 | A |
4983158 | Headley | Jan 1991 | A |
5045048 | Kaleskas et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5100372 | Headley | Mar 1992 | A |
5141486 | Antwiler | Aug 1992 | A |
5312319 | Salter | May 1994 | A |
5387174 | Rochat | Feb 1995 | A |
5405308 | Headley et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5505683 | Geringer et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
5514070 | Pages | May 1996 | A |
5851169 | Meresz et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
5882289 | Sakota et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
5919125 | Berch | Jul 1999 | A |
6123655 | Fell | Sep 2000 | A |
6464624 | Pages | Oct 2002 | B2 |
6629919 | Egozy et al. | Oct 2003 | B2 |
7156800 | Panzani et al. | Jan 2007 | B2 |
7186230 | Briggs et al. | Mar 2007 | B2 |
7211037 | Briggs et al. | May 2007 | B2 |
20010027156 | Egozy et al. | Oct 2001 | A1 |
20020032112 | Pages | Mar 2002 | A1 |
20020142909 | Sakota | Oct 2002 | A1 |
20030181305 | Briggs et al. | Sep 2003 | A1 |
20060199720 | Juan | Sep 2006 | A1 |
20080128367 | Rochat | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20080132397 | Rochat | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20080153686 | Rochat | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20080264841 | Rochat | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20090050579 | Rochat et al. | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20100048373 | Rochat | Feb 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
198 22 191 | Aug 1999 | DE |
19822191 | Aug 1999 | DE |
0 297 216 | Jan 1989 | EP |
297216 | Jan 1989 | EP |
1 057 534 | Dec 2000 | EP |
56 166957 | Dec 1981 | JP |
56166957 | Dec 1981 | JP |
59069166 | Apr 1984 | JP |
09 192215 | Jul 1997 | JP |
09192215 | Jul 1997 | JP |
2005081087 | Mar 2005 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080153686 A1 | Jun 2008 | US |