Balloon Catheter Systems for Delivery of Dry Drug Delivery Vesicles to a Vessel in the Body
20210046292 ยท 2021-02-18
Assignee
Inventors
- William R. Baumbach (New Hope, PA, US)
- Darren R. Sherman (New Hope, PA, US)
- Robert S. Burgermeister (New Hope, PA, US)
Cpc classification
A61K31/436
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M2025/1075
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M2025/105
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M25/10187
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M25/1018
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L2300/416
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L29/16
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61K31/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/436
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L29/14
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
Devices and methods for balloon delivery of rapamycin and other hydrophobic compounds to the wall of blood vessels. Balloon catheters, such as those used for balloon angioplasty, are modified with the addition of a reservoir of dry micelles. The micelle preparation is reconstituted and the micelles are mobilized when the aqueous solution used to inflate the balloons is injected into the catheter. The micelles are infused into tissue surrounding the balloon when pressurized fluid within the balloon leaks through the wall of the balloon.
Claims
1. A method for delivery of drugs or therapeutic agents to a vessel within a body of a patient, said method comprising the steps of: providing a catheter system comprising: a balloon catheter comprising a catheter body with a distal end adapted for insertion into vasculature of a patient, a porous balloon disposed on the distal end, a proximal end adapted for connection to a fluid source, and a lumen extending from the proximal end to the balloon; a storage chamber with a reservoir of dry drug delivery vesicles; reconstituting the drug delivery vessels in the storage chamber to create a suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles of a size; wherein the porous balloon has pores of predetermined size; and the predetermined size of the pores is 2.5 to 125 times the size of the reconstituted drug delivery vesicles; and forcing the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon and into body tissue surrounding the balloon.
2. A method for delivery of drugs or therapeutic agents to a vessel within a body of a patient, said method comprising the steps of: providing a catheter system comprising: a balloon catheter comprising a catheter body with a distal end adapted for insertion into vasculature of a patient, a porous balloon disposed on the distal end, a proximal end adapted for connection to a fluid source, and a lumen extending from the proximal end to the balloon; a storage chamber with a reservoir of dry drug delivery vesicles; reconstituting the drug delivery vessels in the storage chamber to create a suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles of a size; wherein the porous balloon has pores of predetermined size; and the predetermined size of the pores is 2 to 50 times the size of the reconstituted drug delivery vesicles; and forcing the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon and into body tissue surrounding the balloon.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with rapamycin or rapamycin analogs.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with ABT-578, zotarolimus, everolimus, biolimus A9, deforolimus, temsirolimus, tacrolimus, pimcrolimus, nitric oxide synthase, C3 exoenzyme, RhoA inhibitors, tubulusin, A3 agonists, CB2 agonists, 17-AAG, Hsp90 antagonists, tyrphostins, cathepsin S inhibitors, paclitaxel, dexamethasone, ceramides, dimethyl sphingosine, ether-linked diglycerides, ether-linked phosphatidic acids, sphinganines, estrogens, taxol, taxol analogs, actinomycin D, prostaglandins, vitamin A, probucol, Batimastat, Statins, Trapidil, mitomycin C or Cytochalasin B.
5. The method of claim 2, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with rapamycin or rapamycin analogs.
6. The method of claim 2, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with ABT-578, zotarolimus, everolimus, biolimus A9, deforolimus, temsirolimus, tacrolimus, pimcrolimus, nitric oxide synthase, C3 exoenzyme, RhoA inhibitors, tubulusin, A3 agonists, CB2 agonists, 17-AAG, Hsp90 antagonists, tyrphostins, cathepsin S inhibitors, paclitaxel, dexamethasone, ceramides, dimethyl sphingosine, ether-linked diglycerides, ether-linked phosphatidic acids, sphinganines, estrogens, taxol, taxol analogs, actinomycin D, prostaglandins, vitamin A, probucol, Batimastat, Statins, Trapidil, mitomycin C or Cytochalasin B.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein: the step of forcing the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon and into body tissue surrounding the balloon comprises injecting the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles into the balloon and pressurizing the balloon to a pressure of 6 to 12 atmospheres.
8. The method of claim 1 further comprising: performing the step of the forcing the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon and into body tissue surrounding the balloon to delivering the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the porous wall portion of the balloon into the blood vessel at a rate of 0.002 mL/second to 1. mL/second.
9. The method of claim 2 wherein: the step of forcing the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon and into body tissue surrounding the balloon comprises injecting the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles into the balloon and pressurizing the balloon to a pressure of 6 to 12 atmospheres.
10. The method of claim 2 further comprising: performing the step of the forcing the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon and into body tissue surrounding the balloon to delivering the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the porous wall portion of the balloon into the blood vessel at a rate of 0.002 mL/second to 1. mL/second.
11. A catheter system comprising: a balloon catheter comprising a catheter body with a distal end adapted for insertion into vasculature of a patient, a porous balloon disposed on the distal end, a proximal end adapted for connection to a suspension chamber, and a lumen extending from the proximal end to the balloon; a suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vessels disposed within the suspension chamber, with the suspension chamber in fluid communication with the balloon; an inflator operably connected to the suspension chamber and the balloon; wherein the porous balloon has pores of predetermined size; and the predetermined size of the holes is 2.5 to 125 times the size of the reconstituted drug delivery vesicles; and the inflator is operable to force the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon.
12. A catheter system comprising: a balloon catheter comprising a catheter body with a distal end adapted for insertion into vasculature of a patient, a porous balloon disposed on the distal end, a proximal end adapted for connection to a suspension chamber, and a lumen extending from the proximal end to the balloon; a suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vessels disposed within the suspension chamber, with the suspension chamber in fluid communication with the balloon; an inflator operably connected to the suspension chamber and the balloon; wherein the porous balloon has pores of predetermined size; and wherein the porous balloon has pores of predetermined size; and the predetermines size of the holes is 2 to 50 times the size of the reconstituted drug delivery vesicles; and the inflator is operable to force the suspension of reconstituted drug delivery vesicles through the lumen of the catheter and the porous balloon.
13. The catheter system of claim 11, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with rapamycin or rapamycin analogs.
14. The catheter system of claim 11, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with ABT-578, zotarolimus, everolimus, biolimus A9, deforolimus, temsirolimus, tacrolimus, pimcrolimus, nitric oxide synthase, C3 exoenzyme, RhoA inhibitors, tubulusin, A3 agonists, CB2 agonists, 17-AAG, Hsp90 antagonists, tyrphostins, cathepsin S inhibitors, paclitaxel, dexamethasone, ceramides, dimethyl sphingosine, ether-linked diglycerides, etherlinked phosphatidic acids, sphinganines, estrogens, taxol, taxol analogs, actinomycin D, prostaglandins, vitamin A, probucol, Batimastat, Statins, Trapidil, mitomycin C or Cytochalasin B.
15. The catheter system of claim 12, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with rapamycin or rapamycin analogs.
16. The catheter system of claim 12, wherein the drug delivery vesicles comprise micelles loaded with ABT-578, zotarolimus, everolimus, biolimus A9, deforolimus, temsirolimus, tacrolimus, pimcrolimus, nitric oxide synthase, C3 exoenzyme, RhoA inhibitors, tubulusin, A3 agonists, CB2 agonists, 17-AAG, Hsp90 antagonists, tyrphostins, cathepsin S inhibitors, paclitaxel, dexamethasone, ceramides, dimethyl sphingosine, ether-linked diglycerides, etherlinked phosphatidic acids, sphinganines, estrogens, taxol, taxol analogs, actinomycin D, prostaglandins, vitamin A, probucol, Batimastat, Statins, Trapidil, mitomycin C or Cytochalasin B.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0005]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONS
[0014]
[0015] In use, after preparing the balloon catheter and patient, the balloon catheter is navigated to a target site within the patient's vasculature and inflated in order to open an occlusion or restriction at the target site. As illustrated in
[0016] In an alternative method of use, the inner balloon may be used as the balloon which is pressurized to affect the angioplasty or stent deployment as illustrated in
[0017]
[0018] Though pre-inflation of balloon catheters is not universally encouraged, the catheter maybe prepared, prior to insertion into the vasculature of a patient by filling the catheter with an aqueous solution, such as saline (or ringers solution, contrast media (ULTRAVIST for example) and distension media such as dextran), and removing any excess solution from the catheter by drawing back fluid through the inflation port. This may include drawing a substantial amount of the micelles from the catheter into a syringe, mixing the aqueous solution and micelles within the syringe outside the catheter, and re-injecting the micelle/aqueous solution mixture into the catheter. The outer balloon may be filled for a period of time to allow reconstitution, and then drained through the inflation lumen (the process may result in drawing some of the micelles into the inflation lumen). If pre-inflation is performed by the vascular surgeon, any of the three methods described above may be used.
[0019]
[0020]
[0021] Thus,
[0022] In use, the system of
[0023] The method may be modified by injecting fluid into the micelle storage chamber from a syringe separate from the inflator, as shown in
[0024] The proximal components of the system, including the micelle chamber, coiled tube suspension chamber, filter and three-way valve, may be provided in a single housing to facilitate handling and operation of the system. This is illustrated in
[0025] The system may be modified by placing the micelle storage chamber between the three-way valve and the coiled tube chamber, as shown in
[0026] Referring again to the system of
[0027] The inflation pressure and inflation duration, in combination with the amount of dry micelle formulation and volume of the reconstituted micelle suspension can be controlled to ensure a predetermined dose of micelles, and encapsulated drug, are delivered to the body tissue surrounding the balloon. Pressure applied by the inflator may be two to twenty atmospheres, and the inflator is preferably operated to apply 6 to 12 atmospheres of pressure. With suspended micelle formulation in the suspension chamber, and hole sizes of 2 to 5 microns in the balloon, application of 12 atmospheres for 60 seconds will deliver the entire 1 ml of the suspended micelle formulation through the catheter and balloon wall. The parameters may be adjusted to achieve 0.25 to 10 ml over the course of 10 to 120 seconds. The dosage of drug or therapeutic agent actually delivered can thus be controlled and predetermined with some certainty by controlling the amount of drug or therapeutic agent in the micelle formulation disposed in the micelle storage chamber. For example, if it is desired to deliver 2 mg of rapamycin to a diseased portion of a blood vessel, the micelle reservoir containing 2 or 3 mg of rapamycin can be stored in the micelle storage chamber, reconstituting the micelles with fluid to achieve a concentration of 2 mg/ml (that is, 1 ml if the micelle storage chamber contains 2 mg total rapamycin), withdrawing 1 ml of fluid into the coiled tube suspension chamber, and forcing the entire 1 ml through the catheter and balloon into the blood vessel walls.
[0028] The micelles used in the catheter systems described above may be formulated and lyophilized using known procedures, or procedures developed in the future. The micelle reservoir may be disposed within the catheter after formulation and lyophilization, or they may be installed in an aqueous slurry in the catheter or a catheter component, and lyophilized afterward, whereupon the catheter may be stored for extended periods of time prior to shipment, and wetted just prior to use in a patient, or when the balloon or balloons are inflated within the body of the patient. The micelles may be loaded with rapamycin or other therapeutic agents such as rapamycin analogs, ABT-578, zotarolimus, everolimus, biolimus A9, deforolimus (also referred to as ridaforolimus), temsirolimus, tacrolimus, pimcrolimus, nitric oxide synthase, C3 exoenzyme, RhoA inhibitors, tubulusin, A3 agonists, CB2 agonists, 17-AAG, Hsp90 antagonists, tyrphostins, cathepsin S inhibitors, paclitaxel, dexamethasone, ceramides, dimethyl sphingosine, ether-linked diglycerides, ether-linked phosphatidic acids, sphinganines, estrogens, taxol, taxol analogs, actinomycin D, prostaglandins, vitamin A, probucol, Batimastat, Statins, Trapidil, mitomycin C and Cytochalasin B.
[0029] The micelles used in the catheter are preferably formed from tri-block amphiphilic co-polymers of the form A-B-A where A is hydrophobic (PCL (Polycaprolactone) or PLGA (poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) for example) and B is hydrophilic (PEG, or PEO for example), in which case the A block interacts with the micelle core and drugs encapsulated in the core and the B block forms the shell of the micelle. The micelles may also be formed of tri-block amphiphilic co-polymers of the form A-B-A where A is PLA, PDLLA, PPS, PPO, or Poly(amino acid)s and B=PEG or PEO. Tri-block copolymers of the form B-A-B and Di-block copolymers of the form A-B may also be used. Additionally, the micelles may be formed with a core polymer of PCL. The micelles are formed by nano-precipitation, and result in micelle sizes in the range of 40-120 nm diameter. Rapamycin or other drug particles can be loaded into the micelles by entrapment during the initial formation of the micelles. This will result in efficient loading of the drug particles, and a high percentage of the drug particles in the formulation slurry will become entrapped within the micelles. Drug loading may be accomplished by adsorption or migration of the drug into the micelles after formulation, though this is not expected to be as efficient as entrapment. The systems and methods described above can be employed to deliver other small drug delivery vesicles or delivery vessels in addition to micelles, particularly small dry vesicles that benefit from reconstitution immediately prior to delivery, such as nanoparticles and liposomes. Nanoparticles useful in the system include e.g. PCL, PLGA, PLA, PDLLA, PPS, PPO, or Poly(amino acid)s loaded with drugs. Liposomes can include dry powder liposomes made by lyophilization or dry-spraying. The various reservoirs shown in the various devices may be protected by filling the catheter or chamber or balloon housing the reservoir with nitrogen or inert gas.
[0030] After formulation, the micelles are freeze-dried, or lyophilized. The micelles may survive intact, or partially collapse into other structures. Nonetheless, upon re-wetting, a substantial portion of the micelle population will be mobilized intact. To enhance the survival of the micelles, lyophilization may be performed after a lyoprotectant or cryo-protectant, for example, sucrose, glucose, lactose, mannitol, trehalose, may be added to the original micelle mixture. After lyophilization, the mixture of the micelles, encapsulated drug within the micelles, and the lyoprotectant compound is particularly useful as the reservoir described above.
[0031] The micelles used in this system and method described above should be in the range of 40 to 250 nm (0.04 to 0.250 micron) generally, and in the range of 60 to 120 nm when formulated from the tri-block copolymer mentioned above (PLGA-PEG-PLGA or PCL-PEG-PCL). This size will result in a balance of efficient penetration of the micelles into the artery walls and sufficient space within the micelles to encapsulate a suitable amount of rapamycin or other therapeutic substance. Use of tri-block polymers such as PLGA-PEG-PLGA will provide micelles in the desired sized range. For micelle doses prepared prior to loading into the catheter, polydispersity index of the micelle population is preferably less than 0.2, as measured by a dynamic light diffusion test. This may be achieved by controlled formulation, filtration or centrifugation of polydisperse population of micelles.
[0032] For reconstitution of the micelles, an aqueous solution, typically an isotonic solution with or without additional lyoprotectant and/or pharmaceutical excipient, is added to the dry micelle formulation via syringe, catheter barrel, or tube. The suspension is further mixed, if required, by physical agitation, drawing back and forth into a syringe, or other means.
[0033] While the devices and methods described above have been illustrated in the context of coronary artery treatment and restenosis, they may be used in other vessels in the body, including the peripheral blood vessels, esophagus, ureters, urethra, sinus, valves, etc., and may be used to deliver a variety of drugs, therapeutic agents, especially hydrophobic agents which may be encapsulated in micelles or liposomes.
[0034] While the preferred embodiments of the devices and methods have been described in reference to the environment in which they were developed, they are merely illustrative of the principles of the inventions. The elements of the various embodiments may be incorporated into each of the other species to obtain the benefits of those elements in combination with such other species, and the various beneficial features may be employed in embodiments alone or in combination with each other. Other embodiments and configurations may be devised without departing from the spirit of the inventions and the scope of the appended claims.