The present invention relates to the field of retropharyngeal instillation of medicament and particularly to a method and system for the administration of a pulmonary surfactant by atomization with a breath/synchronized delivery.
Preterm infants are prone to develop IRDS (Infant Respiratory Distress Syndrome) because of generalized lung immaturity. Nowadays, clinical management of preterm RDS infants mostly relies on 1) providing respiratory support and 2) administering exogenous pulmonary surfactant. The current most widely accepted approach for providing respiratory support to newborns is focused on avoiding invasive mechanical ventilation and intubation in favour of non-invasive respiratory support approaches such as nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) or high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) whenever mechanical ventilation is not strictly necessary. Even if these approaches showed good results, they are not directly addressing surfactant deficiency and a significant number of newborns still requires exogenous surfactant therapy. Pulmonary surfactant administration is currently performed by bolus administration, as this is the only clinically proven effective administration approach. Unfortunately, bolus administration requires intubation, a complex and invasive procedure that might be associated to several side-effects. Moreover, bolus administration is often associated to hemodynamic and systemic fluctuations, due to the amount of liquid administered in the lungs and due to the sudden following reduction of lung resistance, that, in turn, are considered further potential risks for the babies. Because of these implications, a great effort has been dedicated in finding alternative ways for administration of pulmonary surfactants. In particular, the administration by nebulization has been extensively studied. In more details, commercial nebulizer were inserted along the ventilator circuit. So far, the results of these trials are inconclusive, showing very poor surfactant deposition into the lungs.
In turn, poor deposition could be due to one or more of the following occurrences: 1) a significant amount of surfactant deposits along the ventilator connections, 2) if the patient is under CPAP, the surfactant that is not inspired deposits in the upper airways and is then swallowed by the newborn instead of achieving the lungs, and 3) if the nebulizer is not synchronized with the neonate's breath, the surfactant nebulized during expiration is exhaled.
A possible alternative approach that could overcome these issues was proposed by Wagner et al. (Wagner M H, Amthauer H, Sonntag J, Drenk F, Eichstädt H W, Obladen M “Endotracheal surfactant atomization: an alternative to bolus instillation?” Crit Care Med. 2000; 28(7):2540). They used a modified tracheal tube with an atomizer inserted at the tip of the tube, which produced relatively big particles compared to typical nebulization (˜100 μm) only during inspiration (manually synchronized by an operator). Despite big technological issues and despite the need for intubation, this approach showed to be effective and was further developed by Chiesi and Polytechnic of di Milano (see Patent Application WO2013/160129). The resulting implemented embodiment provides an improvement aiming at overcoming the limitations of previous approaches. In fact this device allows: 1) to deliver surfactant in the newborn's pharyngeal region during spontaneous breathing and 2) to maximize the quantity of surfactant delivered by synchronizing the atomization with the inspiratory breathing phase. The device disclosed in WO2013/160129 is schematically shown in
The system further includes a pressure sensor along the surfactant line for measuring a value indicative of the pressure in the patient pharyngeal cavity, such value being used to determine whether the patient is in an inspiration or in an expiration phase and to activate the pump only during the inspiratory phase. The pressure measured along the surfactant line will be the sum of two contributions: 1) the drop of pressure due to the medicament flow through the catheter and 2) the pressure swings due to the breathing activity.
Since the medicament lumen is very thin and the medicament could be viscous, the flow resistance associated to this channel can be very high. Moreover, as the liquid medicament has to be loaded into the system and, during this procedure, it is very likely that small air bubbles appears into the medicament line and these bubbles, being compressible, behave like hydraulic compliances. The coupling of high resistance and compliances leads to potentially high time constants that have two detrimental impacts on the operation of the system:
1) long rising time in the pressure of the medicament when the infusion pump is activated, leading to long delays from when the volumetric pump starts to when the surfactant flows at the tip of the catheter.
2) it prevents a prompt detection of the breathing phase needed to synchronize the delivery of surfactant in phase with breathing as the breathing signal can be delayed and masked by the motor activation.
In patent application WO2013/160129 the delivery of the medicament and the sensing of the pressure has been done with a single catheter lumen, but this is only one of the possible implementations. For instance, in co-pending patent application PCT/EP2014/072278 filed by the same Applicants, Chiesi and Polytechnic of Milano and not published yet, an alternative embodiment is disclosed embodiment with a separate channel dedicated to the sensing of the breath.
By adding a dedicated sensing line, it has been possible to overcome the issue due to the detection of the breathing, since the sensing line can be designed without the strict constrains of the atomizing catheter, but, on the other hand, issue related to delay in the delivery still remains.
If special care is used to remove all air bubbles, the pressure signal recorded on the medicament line allows the detection of the respiratory phase. In
The diagram of
The consequence of prolonged rising time is mainly that the time in which the medicament starts flowing in the atomizing tip is “delayed” compared to the time in which the infusion pump is turned on, compromising the possibility to administer the medicament only during the inspiratory phase and, therefore, reducing the total amount of medicament potentially deliverable to the patient's lung during each inspiration, leading to longer time for completing the treatment and waste of medicament. Moreover, when the pump is turned off, because of the long-time constant the flow does not immediately stop and part of the medicament is wasted as delivered during expiration.
In
Another side effect of the increased time constant is related to the detection of the breathing activity. If the rising time is too long, the breathing activity is totally masked by the activation of the motor, which has a biggest amplitude (it is equal to surfactant flow time catheter hydraulic resistance) compared to the breathing activity of the baby, preventing from detecting respiratory phase on the surfactant line.
Possible options to reduce the time constant of the system are:
1) Reduce the hydraulic resistance of the surfactant lumen. This can be done but if the surfactant lumen is too big, the airflow needed to atomize will be very high, because the surface contact between surfactant and compressed air is small compared to the cross section of the surfactant lumen. High airflow, such as higher than 1.5 litres per minute (LPM) are not compatible with the system, therefore this solution cannot be implemented.
2) Reduce the compliance of the system. This can be obtained by using rigid components, such as glass syringes and optimizing the mechanical components of the infusion pumps and above all, reducing the amount of bubbles in the surfactant with a careful priming, which is the preeminent cause for compliance. Unfortunately, this procedure is very time consuming and it is difficult to completely de-bubbling the system. Moreover the result of the priming procedure is quite unpredictable, making the working condition of the system difficult to define.
Both proposed adjustment options described above are rather heavy and time consuming and cannot completely solve the problem.
For all these reasons, an improved method and system for administering the exogenous pulmonary surfactant which is capable of compensating the delay in the delivery caused by the mechanical and hydraulic characteristics of the system would be greatly appreciated. Moreover, the possibility of implementing this method without requiring major changes in the mechanical and electronic components is another desirable feature.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome at least some of the problems associated with the prior art.
The present invention provides a method and system as set out in the accompanying claims.
According to one aspect of the present invention, we provide a system for delivering a liquid medicament to spontaneously breathing patients, comprising: i) a catheter adapted to reach the pharyngeal region of the patient, the catheter including at least a first channel being adapted to convey in the patient's pharyngeal region a flow of liquid medicament; ii) first pump means connected to a first end of the at least first channel, adapted to create a pressure which pushes the column of liquid medicament towards the second end of the at least first channel; iii) breathing detecting means, for measuring a value indicative of whether the patient is in an inspiration or in an expiration phase; iv) pressure detecting means connected to the first channel for measuring a value indicative of the pressure of the liquid medicament; v) a microprocessor configured to selectively activate the first pump means according to signals received from the breathing detecting means and the pressure detecting means, so that the first pump means are activated only during inspiration phase and the flow produced by the first pump means is adapted to counterbalance the delay induced by the hydraulic impedance of the system. The medicament to be utilized with the above system could be for instance any pulmonary surfactant.
In a preferred embodiment adapting the flow produced by the first pump means includes increasing the initial flow of the first pump means until the pressure measured by the pressure detecting means reaches a predetermined value. First pump means can include a volumetric pump, in which case the hydraulic impedance is estimated according to the measured value of the pressure in the first channel and the volume delivered by the pump. Ideally the flow produced by the first pump means is adapted by the microprocessor according to a function having a plurality of predetermined sets of coefficients, each set of coefficients being associated to a range of values of the estimated hydraulic impedance. The predetermined sets of coefficients can be stored in a lookup table accessible by the microprocessor.
In an embodiment of the present invention the breathing detecting means includes a pressure sensor, for measuring a value indicative of the pressure in the patient pharyngeal cavity, such value being used to determine whether the patient is in an inspiration or in an expiration phase. In a possible optional embodiment the determination of whether the patient is in an inspiration or in an expiration phase is done by detecting the start of the inspiration phase and calculating the end of the inspiration phase according to predetermined values indicative of the duration of the inspiration phase.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the pressure sensor coincides with the pressure detecting means connected to the first channel. Alternatively the breathing detecting means can use a separate channel to detect the inspiration and expiration phases.
In any case the pressure detecting means and the breathing detecting means can be connected and provide feedback to the microprocessor which will calculate the proper corrective actions to counterbalance the hydraulic impedance according to measured values received from the pressure detecting means and from the breathing detecting means.
In a preferred embodiment the catheter includes at least one dedicated gas channel adapted to convey in the patient's pharyngeal region a pressurized flow of gas, the system further comprising: gas pump means connected to a first end of the gas channel, adapted to create the flow of pressurized gas; so that when the column of liquid medicament and the pressurized gas meet in the pharyngeal cavity, the liquid column is broken into a plurality of particles causing the atomized medicament to be delivered into the patient's lungs.
Preferably, the aerosol medicament comprises an exogenous pulmonary surfactant, e.g. selected from the group consisting of modified natural pulmonary surfactants (e.g. poractant alfa), artificial surfactants, and reconstituted surfactants.
Also, in a preferred embodiment, the pressurized gas includes air or oxygen.
A still further aspect of the present invention provides a computer program for controlling the above described method.
The system of the invention could be utilized for the prevention and/or treatment of the respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) of the neonate (nRDS) and of the adult (ARDS) as well as for the prevention and/or treatment of any disease related to a surfactant-deficiency or dysfunction such as meconium aspiration syndrome, pulmonary infection (e.g. pneumonia), direct lung injury and bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
Therefore, a further aspect of the present invention is directed to the use of a pulmonary surfactant administered by means of the above described system for the prevention and/or treatment of the aforementioned disease and to a therapeutic method thereof.
The method and system of the present invention provides an efficient delivery of the aerosol medicament, controlling the behavior of the infusion pump to make the rising and falling time faster even though the intrinsic time constant of the system is long. Additionally, in an embodiment of the present invention, at the same time the information about the breathing activity contained either directly on the surfactant line or stored in the controller action can be used to extrapolate the breathing pattern. The method and system of the present invention provides several advantages including the use of components which are already familiar to the hospital personnel, e.g. catheters and disposable pressure sensors; all the part in contact with the pulmonary surfactant and the patient are low cost and disposable, granting for hygienically and safe treatments, which is particularly important when the patient is a pre-term neonate.
Reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The tem “liquid medicament” encompasses any medicament wherein the active ingredient is dissolved or suspended in the liquid medium, preferably suspended.
The terms “neonates” and “newborns” are used as synonymous to identify very young patients, including pre-term babies having a gestational age of 24 to 36 weeks, more particularly between 26 and 32 weeks.
With the term “pulmonary surfactant” it is meant an exogenous pulmonary surfactant administered to the lungs that could belong to one of the following classes:
i) “modified natural” pulmonary surfactants which are lipid extracts of minced mammalian lung or lung lavage. These preparations have variable amounts of SP-B and SP-C proteins and, depending on the method of extraction, may contain non-pulmonary surfactant lipids, proteins or other components. Some of the modified natural pulmonary surfactants present on the market, like Survanta™ are spiked with synthetic components such as tripalmitin, dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and palmitic acid.
ii) “artificial” pulmonary surfactants which are simply mixtures of synthetic compounds, primarily phospholipids and other lipids that are formulated to mimic the lipid composition and behavior of natural pulmonary surfactant. They are devoid of pulmonary surfactant proteins;
iii) “reconstituted” pulmonary surfactants which are artificial pulmonary surfactants to which have been added pulmonary surfactant proteins/peptides isolated from animals or proteins/peptides manufactured through recombinant technology such as those described in WO 95/32992 or synthetic pulmonary surfactant protein analogues such as those described in WO 89/06657, WO 92/22315, and WO 00/47623.
The term “non-invasive ventilation (NIV) procedure” defines a ventilation modality that supports breathing without the need for intubation.
With reference to the accompanying figures an implementation of the method and system according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention is illustrated. In the example here discussed we addressed the problem of delivering the right amount of atomized medicament to a patient: in particular we administrated a pulmonary surfactant to a patient population e.g. a preterm neonate. The utilized pulmonary surfactant is poractant alfa, formulated as 80 mg/ml aqueous suspension and commercially available as Curosurf® from Chiesi Farmaceutici SpA.
However, any pulmonary surfactant currently in use, or hereafter developed for use in respiratory distress system and other pulmonary conditions could be suitable for use in the present invention. These include modified natural, artificial and reconstituted pulmonary surfactants (PS).
Current modified natural pulmonary surfactants include, but are not limited to, bovine lipid pulmonary surfactant (BLES™, BLES Biochemicals, Inc. London, Ont), calfactant (Infasurf™, Forest Pharmaceuticals, St. Louis, Mo.), bovactant (Alveofact™, Thomae, Germany), bovine pulmonary surfactant (Pulmonary surfactant TA™, Tokyo Tanabe, Japan), poractant alfa (Curosurf®, Chiesi Farmaceutici SpA, Parma, Italy), and beractant (Survanta™, Abbott Laboratories, Inc., Abbott Park, Ill.)
Examples of artificial surfactants include, but are not limited to, pumactant (Alec™, Britannia Pharmaceuticals, UK), and colfosceril palmitate (Exosurf™′ GlaxoSmithKline, plc, Middlesex).
Examples of reconstituted surfactants include, but are not limited to, lucinactant (Surfaxin™, Discovery Laboratories, Inc., Warrington, Pa.) and the product having the composition disclosed in Table 2 of Example 2 of WO2010/139442. Preferably, the pulmonary surfactant is a modified natural surfactant or a reconstituted surfactant. More preferably the pulmonary surfactant is poractant alfa)(Curosurf®). In another preferred embodiment, the reconstituted surfactant has composition disclosed in WO2010/139442 (see Table 2 of Example 2 of WO2010/139442).
The dose of the pulmonary surfactant to be administered varies with the size and age of the patient, as well as with the severity of the patient's condition. Those of skill in the relevant art will be readily able to determine these factors and to adjust the dosage accordingly.
Other active ingredients could advantageously be comprised in the medicament according to the invention including small chemical entities, macromolecules such as proteins, peptides, oligopeptides, polypeptides, polyamino acids nucleic acid, polynucleotides, oligo-nucleotides and high molecular weight polysaccharides, and mesenchimal stem cells derived from any tissue, in particular from a neonate tissue. In a particular embodiment, small chemical entities include those currently used for the prevention and/or treatment of neonatal respiratory diseases, for example inhaled corticosteroids such as beclometasone dipropionate and budesonide.
The method according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention exploit mathematical concepts which are common to various field of technology (e.g. hydraulic, electronic, automation and controlling theory); in the following paragraph we are providing a brief description of the basic concepts.
The description of the invention will be accompanied by mathematical formulation and modeling which should help in understanding the problems solved by the present invention
The comprehensive delivery system for the medicament and the pharynx environment can be modelled in a very simplified, although consistent way, as described in
This hypothesis is accurate because the system is made of: 1) the atomizing catheter, which is a long thin line filled with viscous liquid, therefore it is well approximated by a hydraulic resistance, and 2) compliances that are mainly due to bubbles and the mechanical frame. This model, according to previous experiences and testing activity is quite simple but able to describe the system, although it does not take into account non-linarites, that can be introduce by the infusion pump or inertial contributions, which are considered as negligible since the amount of mass of pulmonary surfactant line is minimal.
This model makes evident that the rising and falling time issues are mainly related to the intrinsic low pass filtering behavior of the system which is a single pole one.
Moving from the electrical representation to a block scheme, we obtain the representation of
In this representation, θ(t) vector encompasses all the characteristics of the infusion pump and atomizing catheter system and enlighten time dependency.
According to this implementation, the system is defined as in Equation 1,
θ(t)=[R(t)C(t)]′ Equation 1
In a real case, the mechanical characteristics of the device are changing time to time because, even if the resistance of the surfactant lumen of the catheters is very reproducible, the amount of bubbles dissolved into the surfactant may change significantly and unpredictably. For this reason, the device cannot be considered as a time-independent system. Moreover, during the delivery of the surfactant, some bubbles may flow out of the catheter lowering the actual compliance of the system.
Getting into the Laplace domain, the system can be defined by its Laplace transformed as in Equation 2 and 3:
How to Reduce Rising and Falling Time
In a first aspect of the present invention, a new approach to shorten rising and falling time is described. The aim of this approach is to make the delivery of the medicament more efficient and more coherent with the signal triggering the starting/stop of the volumetric pump connected to the medicament line, avoiding the wasting due to the flow generated by the discharging of the compliant element,
For the sake of simplicity, as the effects of the pharyngeal pressure will be neglected being much smaller than the pressure swing due to the activation of the pump, the system can be modelled as in
The first embodiment (Embodiment 1) is represented in
The goal of the closed loop block, CONTROLLER, is to control the motor of the infusion pump to make the pressure measured along the surfactant line more similar as possible to an ideal pressure target point selected previously and corresponding to the desired surfactant flow rate during the delivery time and zero during the hold time (i.e. during the expiratory phase).
Control theory provides several strategies to design a CONTROLLER, such as the optimal control theory, in which the parameters describing the CONTROLLER can be chosen in an infinite domain and can assume any values. Nevertheless, this approach makes impossible to predict the behaviour of the controller for any possible set of identified parameters, being them infinite. As a consequence, possible issues on the reliability and safety of the system can arise because some parameters, although solving the mathematical problem, could be not suitable to the specific mechanical system. In this invention, instead, we use an approach based on a look up table. Few working conditions for the “INFUSION PUMP AND ATOMIZING CATHETERS” were identified according to the mechanical properties of the “ESTIMATED PLANT” and then a CONTROLLER characterized by a set of predefined and tested values, one for each possible condition of the “INFUSION PUMP AND ATOMIZING CATHETERS”, was used. This approach relays intrinsically on a finite number of possible working conditions, which makes possible testing each of them granting for safety and a known behaviour of the system.
In more details, surfactant flows at a given flow rate (for instance 1.2 mL/h) and it produces a certain pressure drop at the inlet of the atomizing catheter which can be measured. The pressure drop is linearly related, (since the flow is laminar such as in this application) to the flow rate by a coefficient that is the hydraulic impedance of the system. The amount of pressure drop needed to produce the desired flow is constant unless there are big changes in the physical characteristics of the system (for example, catheter occlusion). The pressure in the catheter does not reach instantly the desired level of pressure when the motor of the infusion pump is turned on because of the compliance of the system (with “compliance of the system”, we mean that behaviour that, in combination with the high resistance of the atomising catheter, introduces a loss in the performances, e.g. elastic behaviour of the mechanical frame of the infusion pump and, most importantly, gas bubbles in the surfactant circuit). If the motor is controlled by an appropriate close loop control low, in case of low time constant the controller will drive the motor to rotate faster, allowing the desired pressure in the surfactant line to be reached faster. Once the target pressure has been reached, the controller will slow down the rotation of the motor as reported in
Besides, identification block is a core feature of the system because it allows even to trigger the “ALARM AND WARNING” block thanks to:
A possible embodiment of the system that allows reaching the aim of controlling the delivery of the atomization on the basis of the identified model is reported in the following paragraphs. A short description of the device, (atomizing device) will be provided, followed by a possible implementation of each block described in
The device consists of a modified atomization device, as represented in
In this example embodiment, the syringe is filled with Curosurf® and the output of the syringe is connected to an atomizing catheter via a low-resistance/low-compliance tube. The tip of the atomizing catheter is inserted into a test lung where it senses a pressure swing similar to the one due to breathing activity. The pressure of the surfactant line is sensed at the output of the syringe by a pressure sensor.
Infusion Pump and atomizing catheter block has been described in Equation 2. Given the equation, there are several approaches for identifying the values of the parameters which may be selected on the base of the computational resources that are available and on the electronic controller unit.
A very well-known general approach is based on the Nelder-Mead Simplex Method which is able to solve any kind of minimization problem, but since our problem is linear in the parameters space, we decided to use a recursive least square algorithm (RLS).
RLS has two advantages: 1) it doesn't require high computation resources; 2) its objective function presents only a global minimum.
Recursive algorithm updated their parameter at any new given sample; therefore they are able to describe time varying models. In order to make the algorithm faster in following the variation of the parameters, we introduced also a forgetting factor.
The RLS algorithm should be able to properly identify the system even during the action of the controller, because the parameters of the controller itself rely on the state of the system and therefore they should be changes as the system changes.
The system is primed with Curosurf® trying to avoid bubbles or foam. After this, a known volume of air was inserted into the circuit to change the compliance. For each condition we:
1. Started the motor in open loop (that is without being connected to the controller), and allowed it to reach the desired target flow, 1.2 mL/min;
2. Stopped the motor and waited for recovery;
3. Started the motor, with the same amount of bubbles but activating the close loop controller.
The open loop measurement is equivalent to the step response of the system. It is used to estimate the parameters by using the the Nelder-Mead Simplex Method, that we considered as the gold standard.
RLS with forgetting factor was used to estimate the same parameters during the activation of the pump in closed loop.
The parameters estimated by the RLS method and by the Nelder-Mead Simplex Method were compared in Table 1. They are express in arbitrary unit.
These results suggest that the RLS method is reliable in the estimation of the model.
The control science theory deals with several strategy to optimize the control low for a dynamic system. We decided to implement the controller by means of a PID controller, whose parameters are optimized in order to make the response of the system as fast as possible and they are selected according to the amount of bubbles as reported by a look up table found empirically.
The atomizing system was the one described above.
The system is primed with Curosurf® trying to avoid bubbles or foam, although we know it is really difficult to avoid bubbles at all. Then a known volume of air is inserted into the circuit to change the compliance and a sweep is performed. A sweep consists in:
4. Starting the motor in open loop, which is without controller, and to make it reaches the desired flow, 1.2 mL/min;
5. Stopping the motor and waiting for recovery;
6. Starting the motor, with the same amount of bubbles, and to control it in order to achieve the pressure target as fast as possible and to keep the pressure steady.
The amount of bubbles inserted on purpose are the one listed below, they obviously represents the amount of gas that the user might unwillingly insert.
In the table below, the rising time is reported for any amount of bubbles. Rising time is defined as the time needed by the pressure to rise from 10 to 90% of the final level. Results are also represented in
It is clear that, by using the controller, the time needed to establish a proper atomization is shortened up to 50 times and, moreover, the region where the surfactant flow is expected to be constant is flatter as the controller acts in order to keep the system on the target values.
In this embodiment the adjustment mechanism is performed by creating a look up table that associates the parameters of the controller at the system identified.
In this embodiment, the use of a table with a pre-defined number of states instead of a free self-adaptive system allows to pre-define all the possible values of the parameters and, therefore, determine all possible behaviour of the controller action. Limiting the controller action in a pre-determined range allows to warrant that the controller will always work in a safe way avoiding unpredictable behaviour of the controller that could arise when unexpected events of malfunctions affects the measured variables.
Table 3 reports the PID parameters as optimizes at any given amount of bubbles and the rising time in open and closed loop.
Obviously these parameters are tuned according to the specific mechanical frame, therefore they should be re-defined in case the structure of the infusion pump is changed.
In conclusion, thanks to this approach three goals were achieved:
1. Reduction of the rising time of the pressure signal independently of the dimension of the surfactant lumen. This allows making the design of the catheter more independent from the time constant and therefore to make the inner lumen smaller, which, in principle, may reduce the flow of the atomizing gas.
2. Reduction of the sensitivity of the system from bubbles. This will reduce the priming time since the rise time was compatible with the application even in case of large amount of bubbles.
3. Identification of the model. This will provide useful information on the system state, for instance it provides feedback about the kinking of catheter or about the degree of obstruction of the catheter.
Moreover, this approach is very effective from a cost point of view since the regulator does not require new mechanical component nor new sensors, but it needs just a firmware (or software) adjustment.
People skilled in the art may appreciate as the non-time variant case could be considered as a simplified version of the same invention.
A second aspect of the invention is related to the detection of the breathing activity of the patient by using the pressure measure along the surfactant line. For this second aspect, the whole model of the system, as reported in
As mentioned previously and with reference to
A possible approach to detect the breathing phase is the one illustrated in
Pmeasured is given by the sum of the contributions of the surfactant flow resulting from the intermittent activation of the infusion pump added to the pharyngeal pressure developed by the spontaneous breathing activity. As the atomizing catheter presents a high fluidodynamic resistance to the surfactant flow, the pressure generated by the infusion pump activation is usually quite bigger than the one developed by the breathing activity (in some embodiments it could be up to 10 times higher).
The embodiment 2 is based on the following consideration: during the activation of the motor, the breathing activity on the pressure signal recorded on the surfactant line can be masked by pressure drop due to the surfactant flow, conversely, when the infusion pump is not active, the breathing signal is easily detectable. Therefore, a possible solution is obtainable by detecting the beginning of the inspiration on the surfactant line (as during expiration the surfactant delivery is stopped) to start the pump activation and, as the end of expiration will be masked by the activity of the infusion pump, to stop the motor on the base of a previously estimated average inspiration time.
Expiration time can be estimated by measuring the inspiration length (Ti) and the total breathing duration (Ttot) to calculate Ti/Ttot on few spontaneous breaths of the patient done in a period in which the delivery is suspended, then it is possible to use the estimated Ti duration during the delivery phase in the following breaths in order to stop the motor at end expiration.
In order to test the performances of the invention as described in Embodiment 2, two tests were performed: 1) a mathematical simulation in which the efficiency of the medicament delivery was tested on the basis of actual pressure data recorded in the pharynx; 2) an in vitro test in which a prototype of the atomizer device has been used to deliver the medicament triggered by an emulated breathing signal generated by means of an ad hoc simulator.
Data from 5 preterm infants receiving three different ventilatory supports were considered. Table 4 reports the characteristics of the patient population considered.
On these patients, the following recordings were available:
1) Respiratory chest wall volume measured by Respiratory Inductance Plethysmography(RIP);
2) Pharyngeal pressure measured by a catheter-transducer system inserted into the pharynx of the patient.
The beginning and end of each inspiration were detected on the RIP signal in a semiautomatic way and these values were considered as reference for the comparisons.
The algorithm was run on the pharyngeal pressure signal. The assumption is that, during the activation of the motor the end of inspiration cannot be detected from the pharyngeal pressure signal. The algorithm works as a two finite states machine. As soon as one state terminates, the algorithm switches to the other state:
1) State one: breathing pattern parameters initialization state. The delivery of the treatment is suspended for few breaths (for example ten) and during this period end-expiration and end-inspiration data point are identified on the pharyngeal pressure and these data are used to estimate the average Ti/Ttot. Once the estimation of the breathing pattern parameters is concluded, the algorithm switches into the delivery state.
2) State two: delivery state. In this state, the algorithm detect the beginning of inspiration on the pharyngeal pressure signal and uses the estimated value of Ti obtained in state one to stop the infusion pump at end-expiration. As the values of Ti might change during the delivery, the delivery state runs for a pre-determined period (for example 50, 100, 150, 200 or 250 seconds) after which the delivery is suspended and the system is switched back in state one to produce a new updated estimate of Ti.
Two parameters were considered to evaluate the performances of the algorithm:
The results are reported in Table 5 (performances of the algorithm).
Table 5 shows that the treatment was delivered incorrectly only for the 6% of the total duration of the breaths and that it was properly delivered for more than 70% (in average) of the duration of the inspirations even in the worst case of X equals to 250 s.
The data reported seems to state that the values of Ti estimated in the state one is quite stable with time (
The bench test system (
In order to test the capabilities of the breathing detection algorithm, the possible embodiment of the atomized device described above was used. The pressure generator consisted of a servo controlled linear motor whose shaft is connected to the piston of a syringe; the motion of the motor produces a flow that is linearly related to its velocity, the flow is then producing a pressure, which is our aim, by adding an hydraulic resistance in series to the line. The pressure generated is equal to the flow times the resistance. The trap represented in
Once the infusion pump is loaded with surfactant, the synchronisation algorithm is started. The beginning of the inspiration is detected on the pressure signal, while the beginning of expiration is based on the Ti/tot ratio estimated during the initialization state, as described above. Since simulation tests assessed that the interval between one initialization state and the following one is not a very sensitive parameter, in this experiment it has been set to 250 seconds.
1) The synchronization between the activation of the motor and the beginning of the inspiration is quite responsive;
2) The system shows a very fast rising and falling time (approximatively 0.05 s);
3) The system shows very reproducible pressure swings into the surfactant line, suggesting a quite fine control on the surfactant delivered.
Even if this approach is able to provide an effective solution for many applications there is still a possible limitation due to a very variable breathing pattern of the baby which may occur spontaneously or as a consequence of the treatment, that is as the medicament reaches the lung and the healing process starts. In this case the possible errors in start and stop of the delivery might become more relevant. In fact, since the end of expiration of each single breath is not actually detected but it is estimated on previous breathings, there could be relevant differences between the estimated value and the actual one in case of very irregular and time varying breathing pattern, leading to surfactant waste.
Embodiment 3 discloses a solution that allows detecting both end inspiration and end expiration.
Embodiment 3 provides a solution to the problem of delivery the medicament in phase with the breathing pattern of the patient by means of a pump means which can generate a flow of medicament towards the lung of the patient in a prompt way thanks to the approach described in previous Embodiment. Embodiment 3 differs from Embodiment 2 because it provides a way to fully reconstruct the breathing activity of the patient.
This aim can be obtained at least by means of two approached as detailed below.
The complete working scheme of Embodiment 3—APPROACH 1 is reported in
The controller action is acting to make the response of the system as similar as possible to the reference pressure, Preference, that is a step-like signal equals to the flow times the hydraulic resistance of the catheter.
Since the measured pressure, Pmeasured, contains also the contribution of the breathing activity, the controller action tries to compensate even for that signal, thus the controller output will contain informative content about Ppharynx′. If the infusion pump and atomizing catheter block and the estimated plant block are fed with the same signal, i.e. the output of the controller, the estimated P infusion Pump and Pmeasured will be different. This is because the output of the estimated system doesn't include the breathing activity but just the response of a first order system to the controller action. Then, by subtracting the estimated signal to the actual measured pressure, we can obtain the respiratory signal.
Simulations were run to test this embodiment. The following assumptions were considered:
1) the simulation requires to describe both the actual delivery system made of “infusion pump and the atomizing catheter”, as reported in
2) “Controller”, as reported in
The value used for the simulations are reported in the table below:
Ppharynx used in both simulations is the pharyngeal pressure measured in a term piglet breathing spontaneously under CPAP. The piglet weights 1 kg. This could be considered a good reference for the baby breathing pattern,
In
The last embodiment, embodiment 4, presents an approach that is able to totally reconstruct the signal and even to compensate for the delay on the surfactant line. If the time constant of the system is particularly high, that means the delay between the actual pharyngeal pressure, Ppharynx, and the recorded one, Ppharynx′, is too high the afore mentioned concepts could present some limitations that are overcome by this approach
Scheme of Embodiment 2—APPROACH2 differs from Embodiment 2—APPROACH1,
1) Dead band
2) Signal reconstruction and delay detection.
The purpose of these blocks is discussed in detail here below:
In the previous concepts, the controller action has two aims: to compensate for the time constant and to compensate for the effect of the breathing activity that is removed from the signal measured, Pmeasured.
The insertion of the dead band block makes the controller able to compensate only for the time constant effects and not for the breathing activity. This result is obtained by setting the resolution used by the controller to change the flow bigger than the amplitude of the breathing signal, which is several times smaller than the activation signal. In other words, the changes in the measured pressure due to the breathing activity, are under threshold to be considered by the controller and does not results in actions on the infusion pump.
As a finale result, which is the aim in inserting the dead band, Pmeasured contains the breathing activity both when the motor is activated under the controller action and both when the motor is turned off.
Thanks to dead band block, the breathing signal is always detectable on Pmeasured except during the transition of the motor from on to off and vice versa. Since the pressure step in these phases is known, it is possible to fully reconstruct the signal by removing it from PReference. This will result in some blanking time limited to rising and falling time but, if the controller works properly, they will be limited to few milliseconds.
Although dead band allows reconstructing the breathing signal, there is still the issue associated to the delay added by the mechanical characteristics of the catheter (
The actual end of expiration, EE, is delayed compared to the measured one, EE′, that means the delivery of the drug would not be in phase with the actual breathing but it would be delayed of a time that depends on the time constant of the system and the breathing frequencies and can be calculated by Equation 4, where Sys 2 is the block representing the atomizing catheter as in Equation 3 and Tbreathing is the inverse of the respiratory rate.
In order to work properly, the atomising system should be promptly triggered at the beginning of inspiration. To reach this aim, all the elements described above have to be combined together:
1) The reconstructed signal is delayed of a time, Tdelay, that could be estimated by means of the estimated parameters of the system.
2) As shown above, with reference to Embodiment 2—APPROACH 1, given the pharyngeal pressure signal it is possible to predict with a good accuracy the duration of the next inspiration and the next expiration.
Therefore, once the end inspiration on the reconstructed signal has been detected, the next activation of the motor, Ttrigger, Equation 5, would happen after a time equals to the mean duration of the expiration, Texpiration′, corrected by the delay introduced by the surfactant line, Tdelay as estimated in Equation 4.
T
trigger
=T
expiration′
−T
delay Equation 5
The aim of the in vitro testing activity is to prove the feasibility of the approach that can be inferred by the capability of the system to reconstruct the pharyngeal pressure.
The set up was the same reported for Embodiment 2. The amount of bubble added is 0.2 mL.
Advantageously, the system of the invention is applied to pre-term neonates who are spontaneously breathing, and preferably to extremely low birth weight (ELBW), very-low-birth-weight (VLBW), and low-birth weight (LBW) neonates of 24-35 weeks gestational age, showing early signs of respiratory distress syndrome as indicated either by clinical signs and/or supplemental oxygen demand (fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2)>30%).
As non-invasive respiratory support, in a preferred embodiment, nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (nCPAP) could be applied to said neonates, according to procedures known to the person skilled in the art. Preferably a nasal mask or nasal prongs are utilised. Any nasal mask commercially available may be used, for example those provided by The CPAP Store LLC, and the CPAP Company.
Nasal CPAP is typically applied at a pressure comprised between 1 and 12 cm water, preferably 2 and 8 cm water, although the pressure can vary depending on the neonate age and the pulmonary condition.
In another preferred embodiment, nasal intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (NIPPV) could be applied.
Other non-invasive ventilation procedures such as High Heated Humidified Flow Nasal Cannula (HHHFNC) and bi-level positive airway pressure (BiPAP) could alternatively be applied to the neonates.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15164749.2 | Apr 2015 | EP | regional |
15172198.2 | Jun 2015 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/058953 | 4/21/2016 | WO | 00 |