COMPACT PROSTHETIC HEART VALVE DEVICE
20220226112 · 2022-07-21
Inventors
- Cahal McVeigh (White Bear Township, MN, US)
- Jean-Pierre Dueri (Los Gatos, CA, US)
- Yogesh A. Darekar (Irvine, CA, US)
- Priya NAIR (Shoreview, MN, US)
- Finn O. Rinne (Santa Rosa, CA, US)
- George N. Hallak (Costa Mesa, CA, US)
- Brenda L. McIntire (Walnut Creek, CA, US)
- Elliot J. Howard (San Carlos, CA, US)
Cpc classification
A61F2/2409
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2220/0008
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2250/0082
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2210/0014
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
The devices and methods of this disclosure relate to a heart valve prosthesis that is configured to be implanted within a native heart valve having a smaller perimeter annuli with a generally elliptical shape.
Claims
1.-19. (canceled)
20. A heart valve prosthesis, comprising: a valve support having an upstream segment and a downstream segment relative to blood flow through a native heart valve of a human heart, the upstream segment configured to support a prosthetic valve component therein and defining an inflow end of the valve support having a first outer diameter, and the downstream segment defining an outflow end of the valve support having a second outer diameter that is greater than the first outer diameter; and an anchor element that surrounds the valve support, the anchor element having a plurality of connectors that are angled inward toward the valve support and are attached thereto.
21. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 20, wherein the upstream-segment has a first end that defines the inflow end of the valve support and a second end that is adjacent a first end of the downstream segment.
22. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 21, wherein the first end of the downstream segment has the first outer diameter and a second end of the downstream_segment, which defines the outflow end of the valve support, has the second outer diameter.
23. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 21, wherein the downstream segment is flared outwardly from a first end to a second end thereof, with the first end of the downstream segment having the first outer diameter and the second end of the downstream segment, which defines the outflow end of the valve support, having the second outer diameter.
24. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 20, wherein the upstream segment tapers from a first end of the upstream segment, which defines the inflow end of the valve support, having the first outer diameter to a second end of the upstream segment having a third outer diameter that is smaller than the first and second outer diameters.
25. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 24, wherein the second end of the upstream segment is adjacent a first end of the downstream segment, such that the first end of the downstream segment has the third outer diameter, the downstream segment being flared outwardly from the first end to a second end thereof, with the second end of the downstream segment, which defines the outflow end of the valve support, having the second outer diameter.
26. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 20, wherein the anchor element includes a tissue fixation ring configured to engage heart tissue at or below a native annulus of the native heart valve.
27. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 26, wherein the tissue fixation ring is at least partially deformable into a non-circular shape to adapt to a shape of an implantation site in a deployed state.
28. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 26, wherein the plurality of connectors are angled inward from the tissue fixation ring.
29. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 20, further comprising a prosthetic valve component disposed within the upstream segment of the valve support such that valve leaflets of the prosthetic valve component open into the downstream segment of the valve support during diastole.
30. The heart valve prosthesis of claim 20, wherein the valve support and the anchor element comprise a frame of the heart valve prosthesis.
31. A compact heart valve prosthesis for implantation within a native heart valve positioned between an atrium and a ventricle, comprising: a frame having an overall height that is shorter than conventional heart valve prostheses, the overall height of the frame being configured to reduce protrusion of the compact heart valve prosthesis into the ventricle, wherein the shorter overall height includes the frame having a cone height that is shorter than conventional heart valve prostheses, which reduces protrusion of the compact transcatheter heart valve prostheses into the ventricle.
32. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 31, wherein the frame includes a valve support configured to support a prosthetic valve component therein and an anchor element that surrounds the valve support, the anchor element having a tissue fixation ring and a plurality of connectors that are angled inward from the tissue fixation ring toward the valve support to be attached thereto.
33. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 32, wherein the cone height of the frame refers to a measurement between a lower end of the tissue fixation ring and an outflow end of the frame.
34. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 32, wherein the cone height of the frame encompasses the plurality of connectors of the anchor element.
35. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 31, wherein the cone height is shorter than a height of a remainder of the frame such that the remainder of the frame is configured to sit at or near a valve plane of an annulus of the native heart valve, thereby the entirety of the compact heart valve prosthesis in a deployed state is configured to sit upwardly toward the atrium to reduce or prevent obstruction of the ventricle.
36. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 31, wherein the overall height of the frame is about 16.2 mm+/−0.5 mm and the cone height of the frame is about 5.4 mm+/−0.5 mm.
37. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 32, wherein an inflow end of the valve support has a first outer diameter and an outflow end of the valve support has a second outer diameter that is that is greater than the first outer diameter.
38. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 37, wherein an upper segment of the valve support tapers from a first end of the upper segment, which defines the inflow end of the valve support, having the first outer diameter to a second end of the upper segment having a third outer diameter that is smaller than the first and second outer diameters.
39. The compact heart valve prosthesis of claim 38, wherein the second end of the upper segment is adjacent a first end of a lower segment of the valve support, such that the first end of the lower segment has the third outer diameter, the lower segment being flared outwardly from the first end to a second end thereof, with the second end of the lower segment, which defines the outflow end of the valve support, having the second outer diameter.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0028] The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of embodiments thereof as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated herein and form a part of the specification, further serve to explain the principles of the invention and to enable a person skilled in the pertinent art to make and use the invention. The drawings are not to scale.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0041] Specific embodiments of the present invention are now described with reference to the figures, wherein like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements. The terms “distal” and “proximal”, when used in the following description to refer to a native vessel, native valve, or a device to be implanted into a native vessel or native valve, such as a heart valve prosthesis, are with reference to the direction of blood flow. Thus, “distal” and “distally” refer to positions in a downstream direction with respect to the direction of blood flow and the terms “proximal” and “proximally” refer to positions in an upstream direction with respect to the direction of blood flow.
[0042] The following detailed description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the invention or the application and uses of the invention. Although the description of embodiments hereof is in the context of the treatment of heart valves such as the pulmonary, aortic, mitral, or tricuspid valve, the invention may also be used in any other body passageways where it is deemed useful. Furthermore, there is no intention to be bound by any expressed or implied theory presented in the preceding technical field, background, brief summary or the following detailed description.
[0043] Prosthetic heart valve devices and methods described herein provide a heart valve replacement device that is sized to fit within a native mitral valve that is screened as too small, and likely too elliptically-shaped, to accept known mitral valve prosthesis. In accordance with embodiments hereof, the prosthetic heart valve devices may be configured for implantation within native mitral valves with annulus perimeters of between about 89 mm to about 101 mm. The prosthetic heart valve devices described herein have the requisite flexibility to adapt and conform to such native mitral valve anatomy while mechanically isolating a prosthetic heart valve from an anchoring portion of the device, particularly addressing oversizing that may occur in the anterior-posterior direction of an elliptically-shaped, smaller native mitral valve. The prosthetic heart valve devices described herein effectively absorb the distorting forces applied by the native anatomy with sufficient structural strength and integrity to withstand the dynamic conditions of the heart over time. The prosthetic heart valve devices described herein are further configured to be delivered in a less-invasive transcatheter procedure.
[0044]
[0045] In a healthy heart, the valve leaflets LF of the mitral valve MV meet evenly at the free edges or “coapt” to close and prevent back flow of blood during contraction of the left ventricle LV. Referring to
[0046]
[0047] For healthy adult humans, with reference to the long axis LA and the short axis SA shown in
[0048] A perspective view of a heart valve prosthesis 100 in accordance with an aspect of the disclosure is shown in
[0049] In an aspect of the disclosure, the heart valve prosthesis 100 includes a valve support 102 at least partially surrounded by an anchor element 104. The valve support 102 is a hollow stent-like structure that defines a lumen 109 from an inflow end 101 of the valve support 102 to an outflow end 103 of the valve support 102. In an aspect of the disclosure, the valve support 102 has a first or upstream segment 102A and a second or downstream segment 102B, with “upstream” and “downstream” referring to intended deployed positions of the respective segments within a native mitral valve of a heart relative to blood flow therethrough.
[0050] The upstream segment 102A of the valve support 102 is configured to support a prosthetic valve component 108 therein, which will be described in more detail below. The upstream segment 102A may be described as having a substantially cylindrical shape with a first or upstream end 301 of the upstream segment 102A defining the inflow end 101 of the valve support 102. A second or downstream end 311 of the upstream segment 102A of the valve support 102 is coextensive with a first or upstream end 311 of the downstream segment 102B of the valve support 102, and a second or downstream end 303 of the downstream segment 102B defines the outflow end 103 of the valve support 102.
[0051] In an aspect of the disclosure, the first end 301 of the upstream segment 102A that defines the inflow end 101 of the valve support 102 has an outer diameter D1, and the second end 303 of the downstream segment 102B that defines the outflow end 103 of the valve support 102 has an outer diameter D2 that is greater than the outer diameter D1. In various aspects of the disclosure, the second end 311 of the upstream segment 102A and the coextensive first end 311 of the downstream segment 102B have an outer diameter D3 that may be equal to or less than the outer diameter D1.
[0052] In an embodiment of a valve support 102 in which an outer diameter D1 and an outer diameter D3 are equal to each other, the outer diameter D1 of the upstream segment 102A may be described as being constant along the entire length of the upstream segment 102A from the first end 301 to the second end 311 thereof. In such an embodiment, the outer diameter D3 of the coextensive first end 311 of the downstream segment 102B is also equal to the outer diameter D1, such that the downstream segment 102B is flared outwardly from the outer diameter D1 at its first end 311 to the outer diameter D2 at its second end 303, with the outer diameter D2 being greater than the outer diameter D1 as stated above. In an aspect of the disclosure, an upstream segment 102A having a constant outer diameter D1 along its entire length may be described to have the form of a hollow, substantially cylindrical shape, and a downstream segment 102B that flares radially, outwardly from a first end 311 having the outer diameter D1 to a second end having the outer diameter D2 may be described to have the form of a hollow, substantially frustoconical shape. In another aspect, an upstream segment 102A having a constant outer diameter D1 along its entire length may be described to have the form of a hollow, substantially cylindrical shape, and a downstream segment 102B that flares radially, outwardly from a first end 311 having the outer diameter D1 to a second end having the outer diameter D2 may be described to have the form of a hollow, substantially trumpet shaped.
[0053] In an embodiment of a valve support 102 in which an outer diameter D3 is less than an outer diameter D1, an upstream segment 102A gradually tapers along its length from its first end 301 having the outer diameter D1 to its second end 311 having the outer diameter D3. In an aspect of the disclosure, a valve support 102 having a tapered inflow profile may improve hemodynamics as the tapered inflow profile may promote transvalvular blood flow and reduce the possibility of paravalvular leakage. In the aforementioned embodiment, the coextensive first end 311 of the downstream segment 102B also has the outer diameter D3 that is less than the outer diameter D1, such that the downstream segment 102B is flared radially, outwardly from the outer diameter D3 at its first end 311 to the outer diameter D2 at its second end 303, with the outer diameter D2 being greater than the each of the outer diameters D1 and D3.
[0054] In an aspect of the disclosure, an anchor element 104 of a heart valve prosthesis 100 is configured to mechanically isolate an upstream segment 102A of a valve support 102 from the anchor element 104 when the heart valve prosthesis 100 is deployed within a smaller, substantially elliptically shaped native mitral valve annulus. In an aspect of the disclosure, the anchor element 104 is a hollow, stent-like structure that includes a tissue fixation ring 112 and a plurality of connectors 106. The tissue fixation ring 112 is a substantially cylindrically-shaped structure that is configured to engage heart tissue at or below an annulus of a native heart valve, such as an annulus of a native mitral valve. The tissue fixation ring 112 may be configured to engage subannular tissue, such as inward-facing surfaces of the valve leaflets, as shown in
[0055] In an aspect of the disclosure, the tissue fixation ring 112 is radially spaced from the upstream segment 102A of the valve support 102 a distance S in an undeployed state, as shown in
[0056] With reference to
[0057] Each of the connectors 106 of the fixation ring 112 may be described as having an inwardly curved, substantially V-shape with downstream ends 115 of the plurality of connectors 106 being respective vertices of the V-shape. In an aspect of the disclosure, the plurality of connectors 106 may be formed by inwardly curving or bending downstream portions, or downstream halves, of a last row of cells of the stent-like structure of the anchor element 104. In an aspect of the disclosure, the plurality of connectors 106 may extend radially inwardly and downwardly from respective upstream ends, which are coextensive with the downstream end 105 of the tissue fixation ring, to the respective downstream ends 115 thereof and are so configured to permit upward flexion of the plurality of connectors 106, after implantation, to accommodate any radial expansion of the tissue fixation ring 112 that may occur after deployment due to an increase in size of the native annulus, which may occur, for example, due to tissue remodeling after valve replacement, natural growth until adulthood, and/or potential disease progression.
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[0059] In an aspect of the disclosure with reference to
[0060] In addition, with reference to
[0061] A cone height H2 of the frame 430 refers to a measurement between the downstream end 105 of the tissue fixation ring 112 and the outflow end 432 of the frame 430. The cone height H2 encompasses the plurality of connectors 106 of the anchor element 104. In an aspect of the disclosure, a cone height H2 is relatively short and a remainder of the frame 430 sits at or near a valve plane of the annulus AN, with the entirety of a deployed compact heart valve prosthesis 100 being shifted upwardly toward the left atrium LA, to thereby reduce or prevent left ventricular outflow track (LVOT) obstruction. In an aspect of the disclosure, the reduced cone height H2 of the frame 430 also minimizes contact and/or interaction with chordae tendineae and the papillary muscles, and provides advantages in patients with small left ventricles, who heretofore may have been screened out from receiving a mitral valve prosthesis because their annuli are too small or because there would be too much LVOT obstruction.
[0062] As previously described above and with reference to
[0063] A heart valve prosthesis 100 in accordance with aspects of the disclosure, and with continued reference to
[0064] A heart valve prosthesis 100 in accordance with aspects of the disclosure includes a prosthetic valve component 108, as previously noted above.
[0065] The valve leaflets 117 may be formed of various flexible materials including, but not limited to natural pericardial material such as tissue from bovine, equine or porcine origins, or synthetic materials such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), DACRON® polyester, pyrolytic carbon, or other biocompatible materials. With certain prosthetic leaflet materials, it may be desirable to coat one or both sides of the replacement valve leaflet with a material that will prevent or minimize overgrowth. It is further desirable that the prosthetic leaflet material is durable and not subject to stretching, deforming, or fatigue.
[0066] In an aspect of the disclosure,
[0067] In an aspect of the disclosure, a valve support 102 and a tissue fixation ring 112 may be fully lined by a low-profile fabric 119 designed to provide sealing, such as that used in bioprosthetic implants namely endovascular grafts, heart valves or left atrial appendage devices to promote bio-integration, such as woven polyethylene terephthalate (PET) fabric. In an aspect of the disclosure, a woven textile may be employed that will act as a platform for subsequent tissue ingrowth. In an aspect of the disclosure, a low-profile fabric 119 for attaching to the valve support 102 and the tissue fixation ring 104 may be two separate pieces or types of fabric in order to mitigate leaks and reduce manufacturing time.
[0068] Any of a frame, valve support, tissue fixation ring, plurality of connectors, etc. described herein as an element of a heart valve prothesis 100 may be made from any number of suitable biocompatible materials, e.g., stainless steel, nickel titanium alloys such as Nitinol™, cobalt chromium alloys such as MP35N, other alloys such as ELGILOY® (Elgin, Ill.), various polymers, pyrolytic carbon, silicone, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), or any number of other materials or combination of materials. A suitable biocompatible material would be selected to provide a heart valve prothesis 100 that is configured to be compressed into a reduced-diameter delivery configuration for transcatheter delivery to a native valve, whereby release from a delivery catheter returns the prosthesis to an expanded, deployed configuration.
[0069] It should be understood that various aspects disclosed herein may be combined in different combinations than the combinations specifically presented in the description and accompanying drawings. It should also be understood that, depending on the example, certain acts or events of any of the processes or methods described herein may be performed in a different sequence, may be added, merged, or left out altogether (e.g., all described acts or events may not be necessary to carry out the techniques). In addition, while certain aspects of this disclosure are described as being performed by a single module or unit for purposes of clarity, it should be understood that the techniques of this disclosure may be performed by a combination of units or modules associated with, for example, a medical device.