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Title: Biodegradable drug
delivery material for stent
United States Patent: 7,390,333
Issued: June 24, 2008
Inventors: Dutta; Debashis
(Santa Clara, CA)
Assignee: Advanced
Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. (Santa Clara, CA)
Appl. No.: 10/340,052
Filed: January 10, 2003
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Web Seminars -- Pharm/Biotech/etc.
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Abstract
A stent is fabricated utilizing a polymer
that is selected for its tendency to degrade from the surface inwardly
rather than undergo bulk erosion so as to substantially reduce the risk of
large particles becoming detached and being swept downstream. Such polymer
is hydrophobic yet has water-labile linkages interconnecting the monomers.
Ester or imide bonds are incorporated in the polymer to render the surface
degrading materials suitable for use in stent applications. The stent may
be coated with such polymer or may be wholly formed therefrom.
Description of the
Invention
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention generally relates to expandable intraluminal
vascular grafts, most often referred to as stents, and more particularly
pertains to biodegradable stents which completely or partially degrade or
are bioabsorbed over a period of time after deployment.
Stents are used to maintain the patency of vessels in the body. They are
typically advanced through the vasculature to the deployment site while in
a contracted state where they are then expanded to engage the vessel walls
and thereby establish a flowpath therethrough. A stent can be moved along
a guide wire previously positioned in the vessel and then expanded by the
inflation of a balloon about which such stent is disposed. Subsequent
deflation of the balloon and removal of it along with the guidewire leaves
the stent in place and locked in its expanded state. It has been found
that the continued exposure of a stent to blood can lead to undesirable
thrombus formation, and the presence of a stent in a blood vessel can over
time cause the blood vessel wall to weaken, which creates the potential
for an arterial rupture or the formation of aneurisms. A stent can also
become so overgrown by tissue after its implantation that its usefulness
may be substantially diminished while its continued presence may cause a
variety of problems or complications.
In certain situations it is therefore desirable for the stent to be
biodegradable or bioabsorbable so as to curtail the adverse risks that
would otherwise be associated with the stent's continued presence once its
usefulness at the treatment site has ceased or has at least become
substantially diminished. To such end, some stents have heretofore been
wholly constructed of materials that are biodegradable or bioabsorbable.
It is of course necessary to select a material that while biodegradable is
nonetheless biocompatible and additionally, has the physical properties
necessary to properly serve its function as a stent. Such physical
properties include, among others, sufficient strength to support the loads
a particular stent is to be subjected to in its function as a splint, the
radial flexibility necessary for it to undergo expansion, longitudinal
flexibility to allow it to be advanced through a contorted vasculature and
conceivably to adapt to a non-linear deployment site.
Such characteristics have heretofore been achieved with the use of certain
polymer materials such as polylactic acid, polylactic acid-glycolic acid
copolymer, and polyeaprolactone. However, all such previously known
biodegradable/bioabsorbable stents exhibit bulk erosion and are as a
consequence prone to break up into large particles as the matrix breaks
down. Additionally, such materials have also been used as stent coatings
to gradually release pharmacological agents that are infused throughout
the coating. However, the bulk erosion to which such materials are
inherently prone to can cause the coating to flake off or otherwise become
detached. Should such large particles actually become dislodged before
becoming completely degraded, they could be washed downstream and cause
emboli.
A biodegradable stent is therefore needed that is initially capable of
providing the necessary structural support to a body lumen and then
gradually and completely degrades or is absorbed in a manner that
precludes a break-up into large particles. Similarly, a biodegradable
coating is needed that is not prone to flaking or breaking up into large
particles. By preventing the break-up of the stent or of the stent coating
into large particles that may subsequently be swept downstream, the
potential for embolic complications is thereby avoided.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a stent or optionally, a stent coating
which degrades in a very controlled and uniform manner so as to
substantially preclude the possibility of sizeable particles becoming
detached and possibly causing embolic problems downstream. This is
achieved by employing a material in the construction of the entire stent
or in the coating of the stent that erodes in a very controlled manner.
Such material is selected for its strength characteristics as well as its
tendency to erode from the surface inwardly rather than being subject to
bulk erosion. By incorporating pharmacological agents within the material,
the stent or stent coating not only eventually vanishes from within the
body lumen in which it was implanted but additionally dispenses the
incorporated drug in a gradual manner.
Materials that exhibit the desired surface eroding characteristics without
being subject to bulk erosion include polymers wherein the degradation
rate of the matrix is faster than the rate of water penetration into the
interior of the polymeric mass. Such polymers are hydrophobic but have
water-labile linkages interconnecting the monomers. The hydrophobic
property precludes water from penetrating into the interior of the polymer
while water labile linkages nonetheless subject the surface to gradual
erosion. As a result, the stent gradually degrades from the surface
inwardly, substantially without the risk of large particles becoming
dislodged.
While hydrophobic polymers with water-labile linkages are known, their
limited strength and processing capabilities have restricted their usage
to passive devices that neither perform a structural function nor are
subject to stress or distortion. Drugs infused throughout such material
implanted in the body in the form of a tablet or other shape are gradually
released as the polymer degrades. As such, these surface degrading
polymers have functioned as an effective drug delivery vehicle. The use of
such polymers in stent applications has however been precluded as they are
unable to support a lumen wall or remain attached to a stent as it
undergoes deformation during its expansion.
The materials employed in either wholly forming a stent or in coating a
stent in accordance with the present invention include hydrophobic
polymers having water-liable linkages connecting the monomers that are
fortified with the incorporation of ester or imide bonds. Examples of such
polymers include polyanhydrides and polyorthoesters. Additionally, by
employing such polymers in stent applications, a single device can be
called upon to provide the necessary support to a body lumen and
simultaneously dispense a pharmacological agent in a controlled manner.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will
become apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred
embodiments which illustrate by way of example the principles of the
invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The stent of the present invention is employed to support or otherwise
treat a targeted site within the vasculature. Such stent is introduced
into the vasculature, advanced therethrough to the deployment site and
expanded using conventional techniques and delivery systems. Once in
position and subject to the continuous flow of blood therethrough, it
gradually degrades, substantially without the risk inherent in previously
known biodegradable stents or stents with biodegradable coatings of
breaking up into or releasing sizeable particles that may be swept
downstream and cause emboli.
The stent may be wholly constructed of the biodegradable polymer. The
material employed in the manufacture of the stent of the present invention
is a polymer that is simultaneously hydrophobic and has water labile
linkages interconnecting its monomers that are further fortified by ester
or imide bonds. The hydrophobic nature of the polymer precludes the
incursion of water into its interior while the water-labile bonds that are
exposed on its surface nonetheless cause the polymer to degrade.
Degradation thereby exclusively progresses from the material's surface
inwardly to yield a much more uniform degradation rate and to preclude
bulk erosion. The incorporation of the imide ester bonds serves to impart
sufficient strength to the material to enable it to provide the support
that is required of the stent. Alternatively, if the material is used as
stent coating, the incorporation of the imide or ester bonds impart
sufficient strength to the material to prevent it from flaking off or
otherwise becoming detached as the underlying stent undergoes the
distortion attendant its being expanded by for example the inflation of a
balloon.
Many of the stent's ultimate performance characteristics are controllable
by the appropriate selection of the various dimensional parameters of the
stent. Increasing the dimensions of various structural elements of the
stent will generally serve to increase strength and decrease flexibility.
Such effect would result from both an increase in the width or in the wall
thickness of the stent's structural elements. The time period in which the
stent would become totally degraded or absorbed is a function of the wall
thickness of the various elements while the degradation rate is a function
of the total area exposed to contact with the blood. By for example
selecting a stent configuration which employs a large number of relatively
narrow spine and strut elements to achieve a particular level of strength,
the time in which the stent degrades when subjected to the blood flow can
be substantially accelerated. Conversely, a stent configuration in which a
relatively few, wide structural elements are employed causes the
degradation rate to be somewhat retarded.
The stent's ultimate performance characteristics are of course also
controllable by the appropriate selection of chemical variables. For
example, the number of imide or ester bonds that are incorporated in the
polymer material not only affects the ultimate strength and flexibility
characteristics of the stent, but also has an effect on the rate at which
the material degrades when subjected to blood flow. An increased bond
content enhances strength, decreases flexibility and increases degradation
time. The specific requirements of a particular application will
ultimately determine the optimal combination of the stent configuration,
wall thickness and ester or imide bond content.
Polymers that satisfy the above-described requirements include
polyanhydrides and polyorthoesters. Representative examples of
polyanhydride polymers suitable for use in the construction of a stent or
formulation of a stent coating in accordance with the present invention
include anhydride-co-imide ter polymers containing trimellitylimido-L-tyrosine,
sebacic acid (SA) and 1,3 bis(carboxyphenoxy)propane. Other examples of
suitable polyanhydrides include poly(fatty acid--sebacic acid) synthesized
from erucic acid and sebacic anhydride p(EAD:SA) and poly(L-lactic
acid-co-L-aspartic acid). Representative examples of polyorthoester
polymers suitable for use in the construction of a stent or formulation of
a stent coating in accordance with the present invention include
poly(4-hydroxy-L-proline ester), poly(1, 10 decanediol-1, 10 decanediol
dilactide) and poly(1,2, 6 hexanetriol-trimethylorthoacetate). An ester or
imide content of 20%-40% has been found to be effective to provide
sufficient strength for a stent application.
The process for forming a polymer stent is well known in the art. A stent
of the present invention is formed by first causing the appropriate
reagents to react to form the desired polyanhydride or polyorthoester
composition. During copolymer synthesis, the imide content of such
composition is increased by incorporating higher imide containing monomers
like trimellitylimido-L-tyrosine. Increasing imide content results in
higher strength material. Flexibility of polyanhydrides like p(EAD:SA) can
be increased by increasing the percentage of erucic acid dimer (EAD)
during polymer synthesis. The ester content of such composition is
increased by incorporating higher ester containing monomers such as L-proline
ester or trimethyl orthoacetate.
Selected pharmacological agents can be added to the reagents so as to
incorporate such materials throughout the polymer to thereby provide for
the gradual dispensation of the drug over the service life of the stent.
The blending may be accomplished either in solution or in a melt state.
Drugs such as for example heparin or other proteins can readily be added
to the reactants before or during the polymerization process.
Alternatively, some drugs may be infused throughout the polymer after
polymerization is completed. If desired, the drug may be applied to the
surface of the cured polymer to cause the entire dosage to be released
shortly after implantation.
The stent may be formed by any of a number of well known methods including
the extrusion of the polymer into the shape of a tube. Preselected
patterns of voids are then formed into the tube in order to define a
plurality of spines and struts that impart a degree of flexibility and
expandability to the tube.
Alternatively, the drug loaded polymer may be applied to the selected
surfaces of a stent formed of for example stainless steel or Nitinol. In
order to coat all of the surfaces of the stent, the stent is immersed in
the molten polymer. Alternatively, the polymer may be extruded in the form
of a tube which is then codrawn with a tube of stainless steel or Nitinol.
By codrawing two tubes of the polymer with the metal tube, one positioned
about the exterior of the metal tube and another positioned within such
metal tube, a tube having multi-layered walls is formed. Subsequent
perforation of the tube walls to define a preselected pattern of spines
and struts imparts the desired flexibility and expandability to the tube
to create a stent.
Claim 1 of 16 Claims
1. A stent constructed of a biodegradable
polymer, said polymer comprising an ester content of 20% to 40% of the
polymer, wherein the stent degrades from its surface inwardly when
subjected to blood flow, such that bulk erosion is effectively precluded. ____________________________________________
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