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Title: Medical articles having
enzymatic surfaces for localized therapy
United States Patent: 7,407,668
Issued: August 5, 2008
Inventors: Shepard; Douglas
C. (Mansfield, MA)
Assignee: Boston Scimed,
Inc. (Maple Grove, MN)
Appl. No.: 10/057,596
Filed: January 24, 2002
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Woodbury College's
Master of Science in Law
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Abstract
An enzymatically active medical article
is provided, which comprises a medical article and an enzyme disposed at
or near a surface of the medical article such that the medical article is
provided with an enzymatically active surface. The enzyme is selected, for
example, from the group consisting of protease enzymes, glycosidase
enzymes, enzymes that degrade cholesterol esters, enzymes that convert
hydrocortisone to cortisone, enzymes that degrade oxalate, and enzymes
that generate NO from arginine.
Description of the
Invention
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides novel compositions and techniques for
localized supply or removal of various therapeutic agents to the body.
According to an embodiment of the invention, an enzymatically active medical
article is provided, which comprises a medical article and an enzyme
disposed at or near a surface of the medical article such that the medical
article is provided with an enzymatically active surface. The enzyme is
preferably selected from the group consisting of protease enzymes,
glycosidase enzymes, enzymes that degrade cholesterol esters, enzymes that
convert hydrocortisone to cortisone, enzymes that degrade oxalate and
enzymes that generate NO from arginine.
In some embodiments, the enzyme is provided within a biocompatible,
biostable matrix coating disposed on the medical article. In others, the
enzyme is attached to a surface of the medical article. For example, the
enzyme can be: (a) covalently attached to a surface of the medical article,
(b) attached to the surface of the medical article by ion exchange forces,
(c) attached to the surface of the medical article by antibody-antigen
interactions, and/or (d) attached to the surface of the medical article by
nucleic-acid hybridization. In some instances, the device further comprises
an enzyme-free coating layer, which acts to protect the enzyme from the
immune system of the patient.
The medical article can be, for example, a catheter, a guide wire, a
balloon, a filter, a stent, a stent graft, a cerebral aneurysm filler, a
vascular graft, a heart valve, a bandage or a bulking agent. In several
preferred embodiments, the medical article is a vascular medical device.
In other embodiments, the above enzymatically active medical article is
administered to a patient, preferably vertebrate patient, more preferably a
mammalian patient, and most preferably a human patient.
Specific embodiments include the following: (a) the enzyme is an enzyme that
converts hydrocortisone to cortisone, and the medical article is
administered to a site of inflammation, (2) the enzyme is an enzyme that
generates NO from arginine, and the medical article is administered to a
site within the vasculature to prevent restenosis, (3) the enzyme is an
enzyme that acts upon cholesterol esters, and the medical article is placed
adjacent atherosclerotic plaque within the vasculature to degrade the
cholesterol ester deposits found in the atherosclerotic plaque, (4) the
enzyme is a glycosidase enzyme effective to degrade ceramide trihexoside in
the treatment of Fabray's disease, and the medical article is a blood
contacting device, (5) the enzyme is a glycosidase enzyme effective to
degrade glucocerebroside in the treatment of Gaucher's disease, and the
medical article is a blood contacting device, (6) the enzyme is a
glycosidase enzyme effective to degrade ganglioside GM2 in the treatment of
Tay-Sach's disease, and the medical article is implanted within the cranium.
One advantage of the present invention is that therapeutic agents can be
locally supplied to, and undesirable chemical entities can be removed from,
a site of interest.
Another advantage is that therapeutic agents can be provided at a site of
interest without a significant increase in concentration of therapeutic
agent at sites remote from the delivery site.
Another advantage of this aspect of the present invention is that a
self-cleaning medical article is provided.
Yet another advantage is that a non-therapeutically effective or marginally
therapeutically effective substrate molecule can be converted to a highly
therapeutically effective molecule at a local site.
Another advantage is that harmful or potentially harmful substrates can be
converted to a less harmful species at a local site.
These and other aspects, embodiments and advantages of the present invention
will become immediately apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon
reading the disclosure to follow.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to novel articles and techniques for
localized therapy. According to an embodiment of the invention, a medical
article is provided with an enzymatic surface, thereby providing the surface
of the article with catalytic activity.
Medical articles appropriate for the practice of the invention include
essentially any medical article that can be exposed to bodily tissue and
fluids. These articles include both vascular and non-vascular medical
articles. Preferred non-vascular articles include bulking agents, bandages
and wraps. Preferred vascular articles include vascular catheters (for
example, coated balloon catheters, injection catheters or infusion
catheters), coated or uncoated stents (including vascular stents and
cerebral stents), stent grafts, vascular grafts, shunts, aneurysm fillers
(including Guglielmi detachable coils), intraluminal paving systems, guide
wires, heart valves, balloons, embolic agents (for example polymeric
particles, spheres, and liquid embolics) and filters (for example, vena cava
filters).
Preferred sites for placement of the medical articles include the skin (for
example, on skin wounds or over openings), coronary vasculature, peripheral
vasculature, esophagus, trachea, colon, gastrointestinal tract, biliary
tract, urinary tract, prostate, brain and surgical sites.
The medical article can be provided with a catalytic surface in a number of
ways. For example, techniques for placing an enzyme at or near a surface of
an article include (a) attachment of the enzyme to surface regions of the
medical article, and (b) disposition of the enzyme within polymer matrices
associated with the article.
Attachment techniques include covalent attachment techniques, as well as
non-covalent attachment techniques, such as ion exchange techniques,
antibody-antigen techniques and so forth.
Covalent attachment may be carried out in numerous ways. For example, the
surface of the medical article can be treated with a reagent that places
chemically reactive groups on the article surface. These groups are then
reacted with groups commonly found on enzymes, such as amines, alcohols,
carboxylic acids, and thiols.
In other cases, the medical article is provided with a coating that supplies
a functional group of interest. Specific techniques can be found, for
example, in (a) U.S. Pat. No. 6,033,719 entitled "Method for covalent
attachment of biomolecules to surfaces of medical articles" in which a
biomolecule comprising a 1,2 dicarbonyl moiety is combined with a material
comprising a guanidine moiety to immobilize biomolecules, and (b) U.S. Pat.
No. 6,024,918 entitled "Method for Attachment of Biomolecules to surfaces of
medical articles" in which a substrate surface is coated with an
amino-functional polysiloxane and subsequently exposed to a biomolecule.
An example of a non-covalent technique for holding an enzyme on a medical
article surface is found in U.S. Pat. No. 4,525,456 entitled "Support Matrix
and immobilized enzyme system", which describes a system in which a
water-insoluble, functionalized polyethyleneimine, which is subsequently
used to immobilize enzymes by ion exchange forces, is disposed on a support.
Other examples of non-covalent binding include protein-based techniques
(e.g., antibody-antigen interactions) and nucleic-acid-hybridization based
techniques (e.g., enzymatic RNA), both of which are known in the art. For
example, it is known in the art to coat medical articles with heparin using
protein-based processes of this type. Avidin-based technologies are another
preferred group of attachment techniques.
In the instances where the enzyme is disposed within a polymer matrix
associated with the article, the enzyme is preferably held within the
matrix, rather than released from it. Hence, preferred matrices are
biocompatible, biostable matrices that will hold the enzyme in place, while
at the same time allowing diffusion of substrates into and diffusion of
products out of the matrix. By "biostable" is meant a polymer that does not
substantially degrade in vivo. Thus, a biostable polymer is one that
maintains its structural integrity, i.e., is substantially inert, in the
presence of a physiological environment.
The matrix or matrices can constitute the entire medical article or a
distinct portion of a medical article (for example, a discrete article
component, a portions of an article component, a coating on the article
surface, and so forth).
Preferred biocompatible, biostable polymers include numerous thermoplastic
and elastomeric polymeric materials that are known in the art. Polyolefins
such as metallocene catalyzed polyethylenes, polypropylenes, and
polybutylenes and copolymers thereof; ethylenic polymers such as
polystyrene; ethylenic copolymers such as ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA),
ethylene-methacrylic acid and ethylene-acrylic acid copolymers where some of
the acid groups have been neutralized with either zinc or sodium ions
(commonly known as ionomers); polyacetals; chloropolymers such as
polyvinylchloride (PVC); fluoropolymers such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE);
polyesters such as polyethylene terephthalate (PET); polyester-ethers;
polysulfones; polyamides such as nylon 6 and nylon 6,6; polyamide ethers;
polyethers; elastomers such as elastomeric polyurethanes and polyurethane
copolymers; silicones; polycarbonates; and mixtures and block or random
copolymers of any of the foregoing are non-limiting examples of biostable
biocompatible polymers useful for manufacturing the medical devices of the
present invention.
Additional preferred biocompatible biostable polymers, which are not
necessarily exclusive of those listed in the prior paragraph, are described
in U.S. Pat. No. 6,153,252, the disclosure of which is incorporated by
reference. These polymers include polyurethanes, silicones,
poly(meth)acrylates, polyesters, polyalkylene oxides such as polyethylene
oxide, polyvinyl alcohols, polyethylene glycols and polyvinyl pyrrolidone;
hydrogels such as those formed from crosslinked polyvinyl pyrrolidinone and
polyesters could also be used. Other polymers include polyolefins,
polyisobutylene and ethylene-alphaolefin copolymers; acrylic polymers
(including methacrylic polymers) and copolymers, vinyl halide polymers and
copolymers, such as polyvinyl chloride; polyvinyl ethers, such as polyvinyl
methyl ether; polyvinylidene halides such as polyvinylidene fluoride and
polyvinylidene chloride; polyacrylonitrile, polyvinyl ketones; polyvinyl
aromatics such as polystyrene; polyvinyl esters such as polyvinyl acetate;
copolymers of vinyl monomers with each other and olefins, such as
ethylene-methyl methacrylate copolymers, acrylonitrile-styrene copolymers,
ABS resins and ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers; polyamides, such as nylon
6,6 and polycaprolactam; alkyd resins; polycarbonates; polyoxymethylenes;
polyimides; polyethers; epoxy resins, polyurethanes; rayon;
rayon-triacetate, cellulose, cellulose acetate, cellulose acetate butyrate;
cellophane; cellulose nitrate; cellulose propionate; cellulose ethers (i.e.
carboxymethyl cellulose and hydroxyalkyl celluloses); and combinations
thereof. Polyamides for the purpose of this application would also include
polyamides of the form --NH--(CH.sub.2)n--CO--and NH--(CH.sub.2).sub.x--NH--CO--(CH.sub.2).sub.y--CO,
wherein n is preferably an integer in from 6 to 13; x is an integer in the
range of form 6 to 12; and y is an integer in the range of from 4 to 16.
Mixtures and block or random copolymers of any of the foregoing are also
useful in the present invention.
Among the more preferred biostable polymeric materials are polyolefins,
polyolefin-polyvinylaromatic copolymers including polystyrene-polyisobutylene
copolymers and butadiene-styrene copolymers, ethylenic copolymers including
ethylene vinyl acetate copolymers (EVA) and copolymers of ethylene with
acrylic acid or methacrylic acid; elastomeric polyurethanes and polyurethane
copolymers; metallocene catalyzed polyethylene (mPE), mPE copolymers;
ionomers; polyester-ethers; polyamide-ethers; silicones; and mixtures and
copolymers thereof.
Also among the more preferred biostable polymeric materials are block
copolymers having at least two polymeric blocks A and B. Examples of such
block copolymers include the following: (a) BA (linear diblock), (b) BAB or
ABA (linear triblock), (c) B(AB).sub.n or A(BA).sub.n (linear alternating
block), or (d) X-(AB).sub.n or X-(BA).sub.n (includes diblock, triblock and
other radial block copolymers), where n is a positive whole number and X is
a starting seed molecule. One specific preferred group of polymers have X-(AB).sub.n
structures, which are frequently referred to as diblock copolymers and
triblock copolymers where n=1 and n=2, respectively (this terminology
disregards the presence of the starting seed molecule, for example, treating
A-X-A as a single A block with the triblock therefore denoted as BAB). Where
n=3 or more, these structures are commonly referred to as star-shaped block
copolymers.
The A blocks are preferably soft elastomeric components which are based upon
one or more polyolefins, more preferably a polyolefinic block having
alternating quaternary and secondary carbons of the general formulation: --(CRR'--CH.sub.2).sub.n--,
where R and R' are linear or branched aliphatic groups such as substituted
or unsubstituted methyl, ethyl, propyl, isopropyl, butyl, isobutyl and so
forth, or substituted or unsubstituted cyclic aliphatic groups such as
cyclohexane, cyclopentane, and the like. Polymers of isobutylene
-- see Original Patent.
Preferred seed molecules are
those known in the art and include tert-ester, tert-ether, tert-hydroxyl or
tert-halogen containing compounds, and more typically cumyl esters of
hydrocarbon acids, alkyl cumyl ethers, cumyl halides and cumyl hydroxyl
compounds as well as hindered versions of the above.
Particularly preferred polymers within this category include copolymers of
polyisobutylene with polystyrene or polymethylstyrene, even more preferably
polystyrene-polyisobutylene-polystyrene triblock copolymers. These polymers
are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,741,331, U.S. Pat. No.
4,946,899 and U.S. Ser. No. 09/734,639, each of which is hereby incorporated
by reference in its entirety.
In certain applications, it will be advantageous to hide the surface enzyme
from the body's immune surveillance. Under these circumstances, additional
coatings, such as hydrogel coatings, can be applied over the enzyme.
Numerous embodiments of the present invention are contemplated. In some
embodiments, enzymes held on the surface of the medical article can be used
to provide a self-cleaning article. As a specific example, proteases
attached to the surface of the article can be used to clean the surface of
attached proteins.
In other embodiments, the enzyme will act upon a substrate found in a bodily
fluid, such as blood, urine, tears, gastrointestinal fluids, saliva, bile or
lymph, or in or on bodily tissue.
In some of these embodiments, a substrate molecule with marginal or no
therapeutic efficacy is converted to a therapeutically effective molecule.
For example, in some embodiments of the present invention, a prodrug within
the bloodstream is converted into an active counterpart at a specific site
of interest. As a specific example, hydrocortisone can be converted to
cortisone using an esterase enzyme, ensuring that the treatment site, which
is adjacent to or upstream of the enzyme, is exposed to elevated levels of
the active compound.
As another example, one or more enzymes that generate NO from arginine for
example, nitric oxide synthetase, are provided at or near the surface of a
medical article. Such enzymes are preferably provided in connection with
vascular medical devices, such as those listed above. When placed at a site
of interest, such devices generate NO from arginine in the blood. NO is
noted for its ability to prevent restenosis (e.g., by impeding proliferation
of vascular smooth muscle in damaged vessels) and for its ability to relax
vascular smooth muscle and improve perfusion in poorly oxygenated tissues,
among others. The NO generated in this fashion is thus provided locally and
downstream from the article, providing a beneficial function.
In others of these embodiments, a harmful or potentially harmful substrate
will be converted to a less harmful species. For example, an enzyme that
degrades oxalate (preventing calcium oxalate crystals and hence kidney
stones from forming) can be provided on the surface of a catheter in the
urinary tract. Such an enzyme is available from Sigma Chemical Co, Catalog
number 04878. See also FEBS Lett. Jan. 20, 1986; 195(1-2); 101-5, in which
dialysis membrane capsules containing immobilized oxalate oxidase were shown
to intraperitoneally metabolize oxalate, as well as its glyoxalate
precursor, in rats.
As another example, a glycosidase enzyme, such as .alpha.-galactosidase,
.beta.-galactosidase or .beta.-glucosidase disposed on a filter or other
blood contacting device can be placed such that it is exposed to blood flow
(or, for example, at the site of the accumulation of lipid, such as the
brain in the case of Tay-Sachs disease), allowing, for instance, a product
associated with an inborn error of metabolism to be degraded. For example,
ceramide trihexoside is degraded in connection with the treatment of
Fabray's disease, glucocerebroside is degraded in connection with the
treatment of Gaucher's disease, and ganglioside GM2 is degraded in
connection with the treatment of Tay-Sach's disease.
As another example, an enzyme can be provided that acts upon a substrate
found in solid tissue, including diseased tissue. For example, an enzyme can
be disposed on or within a medical article that is introduced into the
vasculature to degrade the cholesterol ester deposits found in
atherosclerotic plaque. Exemplary enzymes include cholesterol esterase and
cholesterol oxidase.
Claim 1 of 32 Claims
1. An enzymatically active medical
article comprising: a medical article having a matrix disposed on said
article, wherein the matrix comprises a block copolymer comprising a
polyolefinic block comprising polybutylene and a thermoplastic block
comprising polymers of acrylates, methacrylates or vinyl aromatics, an
enzyme disposed within said matrix and at or near a surface of said
medical article, such that said medical article is provided with an
enzymatically active surface, wherein said matrix allows diffusion of
substrates into and diffusion of products out of the matrix, wherein said
enzyme is elected from the group consisting of protease enzymes,
glycosidase enzymes, enzymes that degrade oxalate, and enzymes that
generate NO from arginine. ____________________________________________
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