Fluid delivery systems, devices, and methods for delivery of hazardous fluids
09561344 ยท 2017-02-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Arthur E. Uber, III (Pittsburgh, PA)
- Alan D. Hirschman (Glenshaw, PA)
- David M. Griffiths (Pittsburgh, PA, US)
- Frederick W. Trombley, III (Gibsonia, PA, US)
- David M. Reilly (Pittsburgh, PA, US)
Cpc classification
A61J1/2096
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61N5/1001
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A catheter including an outer conduit and an inner conduit positioned within the outer conduit, the inner conduit having a smaller diameter that that of the outer conduit. A volume between the outer conduit and the inner conduit define a first lumen which may deliver a first fluid to a patient, and an inside diameter of the inner conduit defines a second lumen which may deliver a second fluid to the patient such that the fluid flow of the first fluid and the second fluid exiting the catheter has a flow profile where the first fluid surrounds the second fluid and the second fluid is prevented from contact with inner walls of a blood vessel of the patient in a vicinity of a tip of the catheter.
Claims
1. A catheter, comprising: an outer conduit; and an inner conduit positioned within the outer conduit and having a diameter smaller than a diameter of the outer conduit, wherein a volume between the outer conduit and the inner conduit define a first lumen adapted to deliver a first fluid to a patient, and an inside diameter of the inner conduit define a second lumen adapted to deliver a second fluid to the patient such that a fluid flow of the first fluid and the second fluid exiting the catheter has a flow profile where the first fluid surrounds the second fluid and the second fluid is prevented from contact with inner walls of a blood vessel of the patient in a vicinity of a tip of the catheter, wherein the first fluid is saline and the second fluid is a hazardous pharmaceutical.
2. The catheter of claim 1, wherein the inner conduit ends rearward of the outer conduit.
3. The catheter of claim 1, wherein the second fluid is an antitumor chemotherapy pharmaceutical.
4. A method for delivering a hazardous pharmaceutical comprising: providing a catheter comprising an outer conduit, and an inner conduit positioned within the outer conduit and having a diameter smaller than a diameter of the outer conduit, wherein a volume between the outer conduit and the inner conduit define a first lumen adapted to deliver a first fluid to a patient, and an inside diameter of the inner conduit define a second lumen adapted to deliver a second fluid to the patient; flowing the first fluid through the first lumen; and after a predetermined time, flowing the second fluid through the second lumen, wherein the fluid flow of the first fluid and the second fluid exiting the catheter has a flow profile where the first fluid surrounds the second fluid such that the second fluid is prevented from contact with inner walls of a blood vessel of the patient in a vicinity of a tip of the catheter.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the first fluid is saline and the second fluid is a hazardous pharmaceutical.
6. The method of claim 4, further comprising reducing a flow rate of the first fluid by an amount equal to a flow rate of the second fluid at the predetermined time, such that a flow rate of the fluid exiting the catheter remains constant.
7. The method of claim 6, further comprising reducing the flow rate of the second fluid to zero after sufficient amount of the second fluid has been administered; and increasing the flow rate of the first fluid so that the flow rate of the fluid exiting the catheter remains constant.
8. The method of claim 4, wherein delivery of the second fluid is continuous until all of the second fluid is delivered.
9. The method of claim 4, wherein delivery of the second fluid is periodic and separated by delivery of only the first fluid between pulses of the second fluid.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Other aspects of the invention and their advantages will be discerned from the following detailed description when read in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(24) A system currently used for the injection of a gene therapy drug is illustrated in
(25) Manifold 30 has several valves, typically three or four, which in the system of
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(27) Pump 42 delivers the gene therapy drug or other drug. In this embodiment, the drug remains in its container 52 and is pumped from the container by a peristaltic pump 42. The drug flows through tubing 24c and then tubing 24a into the manifold and thence into patient 1. Tubing 24c and 24a can, for example, be microbore tubing to minimize the amount of fluid or dead space in the tubing itself. In the embodiment of
(28) A biohazard containment or enclosure 70 enables spiking and withdrawal of the gene therapy drug from drug container 52 outside of the pharmacy and, indeed, outside of a hood. One end of fluid path element 24c penetrates and is sealed to biohazard enclosure 70. The spike, needle, or other mechanism for making fluid connection to drug container 52 is inside biohazard enclosure 70 and is sheathed to protect the operator and enclosure 70. During use, biohazard enclosure 70 is opened, and drug container 52 is placed inside. Then, biohazard enclosure 70 is sealed and container 52 is connected to fluid path 24c using gloves or other flexible handling devices that operate through the walls of biohazard enclosure 70. If biohazard enclosure 70 is flexible, it does not need to be vented. If it is rigid or semi-rigid, it preferably incorporates a vent, which is preferably adapted or designed to contain any aerosolized biohazardous material. The vent can incorporate activated charcoal or a zeolite material if it is necessary or desired to contain drug vapors as well. The in-suite biohazard enclosure 70 of the present invention saves considerable time, labor and expense by eliminating the syringe filling steps in the pharmacy. Biohazard enclosure 70 can for example, include a Captair Field Pyramid glove box available from CAPTAIR LABX, INC. of North Andover, Mass.
(29) Another embodiment of a biohazard enclosure 80 of the present invention is shown in
(30) It may be advantageous if the drug bottle is distributed with an integral biohazard enclosure such as illustrated in
(31) An alternative embodiment that provides some indication of the efficacy or patency of the sealed enclosure can be formed by connecting filtered vent 81d to a low flow rate vacuum pump, either continuous or periodically operating, either manual or automatic. By measuring the pressure in the enclosure, any compromise of the enclosure, will be indicated by a pressure rise and an alarm or indication can be made to the operator.
(32) Another embodiment of a biohazard enclosure is illustrated in
(33) By eliminating or preventing the opening of the liquid connection, a significant source of aerosol generation is removed by the system of
(34) An alternative to a tightly sealed enclosure is a less tightly sealed, passive enclosure that includes germicidal, viruscidal, or chemical destroying agents, devices or substances. Examples of germicidal, viruscidal, or chemical destroying agents, devices or substances include, but are not limited to, ultraviolet light, hydrogen peroxide vapor, activated charcoal, and ozone gas. In some circumstances, surfaces such as those coated or impregnated with silver, platinum, enzymes, activated charcoal, or Triclosan can be used.
(35) As shown in
(36) Pump 42 can provide steady consistent flow over extended periods of time (for example, over minutes) much better than a human pushing a syringe plunger. The consistent flow provided by pump 42 reduces the risk associated with operator fatigue and/or mistakes. Also, by making the connection in a protected way, and then throwing away, as a unit, fluid path 24, containers 51 and 52, enclosure 70, and other fluid path elements, there is no opening of the fluid path that could allow the biohazardous material to escape into the environment.
(37) Saline, other flushing fluid or another non-hazardous drug can be stored in container 51. Flow is driven or caused by pump 41. The flushing fluid flows through tubing 24b and 24a, into manifold 30 and thence into patient 1. In certain gene therapy procedures, the initial flush flow rate is preferably the same as the drug flow rate and preferably begins immediately after the flow of the drug is stopped, because it is used to flush drug out of the fluid path into patient 1. The saline can also be pumped simultaneously with the drug to provide dilution of the drug if that is advantageous. Rapid alternations between saline and drug delivery can also produce a dilution effect with the fluids mixing as they traverse the remainder of the fluid path. Additionally, in situations where two or more of the possible multiple fluids are incompatible, the flushing fluid can be used to separate the incompatible fluids before delivery to the patient. For example, some X-ray contrasts are incompatible with some gene therapy drugs.
(38) Pumps 41 and 42 can be one of many commercially available pumps. For example, a suitable pump is the CONTINUUM pump available from Medrad, Inc. of Indianola, Pa. The PEGASUS series of pumps available from Instech Laboratories, Inc. of Plymouth Meeting, Pa., can also be used in some applications. Depending upon the details of the procedure and the number of fluids to be used, multiple hazardous fluid pumps with containment chambers and/or multiple non-hazardous fluid pumps can be used.
(39) Where fluid lines 24b and 24c come together to start segment 24a, it can be useful to have one or more spring-loaded one way valves or electrically controlled valves 24d and 24e, so that there is no flow or diffusion of one fluid into another fluid. A similar use of valves is, for example, found on the disposable fluid path used with the SPECTRIS MR injectors available from Medrad, Inc. to prevent diffusion mixing of MR contrast into the flushing fluid.
(40) With the systems of the present invention, the operator can inject and flush the gene therapy drug much more consistently and conveniently than by current hand operated procedures. The sequence, volumes, flow rates, and durations of various injections can be effected in the same manner as those currently effected by hand, or can be much more flexible, sophisticated, or complex than is possible with separate syringes and hand injections.
(41) Another feature of the systems of the present invention that can increase ease of use and safety is waste container 55 illustrated in
(42) Dashed lines 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, and 68 in
(43) Communication paths 60, 61, and 62 communicate with system pumps 40, 41, and 42, respectively. Communication path 63 communicates with manifold 30 so that the proper fluid path is open at the proper time. Communication paths 65 and 66 can operate valves 24d and 24e respectively, if they are controlled valves rather than spring loaded valves. Communication path 64 is shown schematically to bring heartbeat information from patient 1 to control unit 69a. An instrument (not shown) can be provided that acquires the signal and conditions or operates on it before outputting it to control unit 69a. The instrument can, for example, be an ECG monitor, a blood pressure monitor, a pulse oximeter, image segment or region of interest extractor, or other device. If control unit 69a incorporates, for example, a data acquisition card (available, for example, from National Instruments) with sufficient isolation, no additional instrument is necessary. In situations where the target is an organ other than the heart, the instrument can monitor some physiological parameter or imaging aspect related to that target organ. An example is monitoring respiration where the parameters of interest are respiration rate, tidal volume and end tidal volume. Other examples are peristaltic contraction of the intestines or voluntary or stimulated contraction of muscles.
(44) There are many varieties of communication paths. For example, communication paths can be hard-wired using the presence or absence of a voltage to activate a relay, or using a standard such as RS-232. The control lines can be electrical, hydraulic, pneumatic, mechanical, or any other advantageous communications lines. Alternatively, the communication paths can be wireless using any one of many standard protocols. The communication paths can also utilize IR data transmission methods. Additionally, one type of transmission method/protocol can be used for one communication path and another type used for a different communication path.
(45) In addition to the benefits of fluid delivery synchronization, centralized control, and common user interface, the systems of the present invention provide the ability to overcome the need for deep subselective catheter placement to avoid reflux.
(46) In that regard, during diastole, the heart muscle is relaxing and the chambers are filling with blood. At the same time, pressurized blood is stored in the aorta and is flowing into the coronary blood vessels. During systole, the heart muscle contracts, expelling blood from the inside of the heart. During this cycle the blood in the coronary arteries undergoes a reversal in flow direction. This is termed reflux. It is not normally a problem, and is not a problem during regular angiography. Some of the contrast is simply carried back into the aorta and out into the systemic circulation.
(47) However, for gene therapy drugs or other toxic, hazardous or strong treatments, it is desirable to have no reflux of the hazardous substance into the systemic circulation or nearby vessels. In the current gene therapy practice, reflux is avoided by placing the catheter deep into the coronary vessels. An alternative to deep placement is to synchronize the injection of the drug with the heart beat of the patient, so that the drug flow is stopped sufficiently in advance such that the reflux of blood does not bring any drug into the aorta and thence into the systemic circulation.
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(49) If pump 42 cannot start and stop fast enough to deliver the necessary flow pulses, passive valve 24e may be replaced by an active valve that rapidly turns on and off to deliver sharp pulses. If there is too much capacitance or compliance in the fluid path from 24e to patient 1, then the active valve can be moved down stream to improve the bolus sharpness. The active valve can be of any suitable type including, for example electromagnetic, piezoelectric, pneumatic, or hydraulic.
(50) In certain situations, it may be an advantage to have pump 42 or the active valve actually draw back a few microliters of fluid when the flow stops. This action draws a little blood into the catheter and thereby ensures that as blood refluxes back from the artery into the aorta, no drug can diffuse from the catheter and get into the aorta.
(51) While the above has been described with respect to liquids in the blood vessels, and in particular the coronary arteries, similar benefits of efficient drug delivery and minimization of undesired drug migration can be achieved by synchronizing aerosol drug delivery via the lungs. The drug is provided into the air stream as air is inhaled. Drug delivery is stopped before inhalation ceases, so that all of the drug is carried deep into the lungs. Thus there is much less or no exhalation of drug.
(52) An alternative to reflux prevention through injection synchronization is to employ occluding balloons to stop flow for a period of time while the drug is infused. The balloon inflation can be done manually or automatically. The balloon inflation device is preferably in communication with the control unit 69a. It can be inflated for a short period of time during which drug is delivered, then deflated, for example to allow blood to nourish the heart muscle or for another breath to be taken. This procedure can be repeated a number of times. A benefit of the occlusive approach of the present invention is that the drug is not continually being washed out of the muscle and into the venous system.
(53) A two balloon occlusive system could be employed, with the drug injected into the space between the two balloons. This procedure allows treatment of a selected section of a blood vessel and can, for example, be useful to pretreat or post treat arterial segments that are being stented.
(54) The fluid path of the system shown in
(55) Table 1 sets forth a brief description of the system set-up and drug delivery steps for the current practice and for the present invention and illustrates the improvements evident in a comparison of the required steps.
(56) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 1. Store frozen vials in the pharmacy. a. Store frozen vials in the pharmacy 2. In a pharmacy hood, using gloves and proper b. Transport the drug bottle to the suite, install in technique, thaw the bottle with the gene therapy the biohazard enclosure and thaw. (Or, install in drug in the hand, avoiding agitation. biohazard enclosure in pharmacy and transport therein.) 3. Using a needle, pull a few ml of drug into a 10 ml syringe. 4. Add a few ml of saline to dilute it. 5. Place the 10 ml syringe in a 20 ml syringe holder for transport to the interventional suite to preserve the sterility of the outside of the syringe. (Thawed drug has to be used in several hours.) 6. Operating personnel put on and wear goggles and masks with M-95 filters to protect against infection from airborne virus. 7. All the fluid lines are purged of air. The c. Purge air from all fluid lines, ensuring that any operators can dilute the drug further if there are biohazard material is delivered into the waste more than 4 coronary arteries to inject. container 55. Connect the patient ECG to the control unit 69a. 8. The catheter is positioned in the desired vessel d. The catheter is positioned in the desired vessel using normal angiographic equipment and using normal angiographic equipment (manifolds, technique. Deep subselective placement can be catheters, guidewires) and technique. used avoid any reflux of contrast or drug into Deep subselective placement is not needed. the aorta. 9. The placement is verified with a contrast e. The placement is verified with a contrast injection. injection. 10. The manifold and/or catheter are optionally f. The operator programs the pumps to deliver the flushed with saline by removing the contrast proper amount with the proper timing. syringe and attaching the saline syringe. 11. The saline syringe is disconnected, the gene therapy syringe is connected and 1 to 5 milliliters is injected by hand over 1 to 2 minutes. 12. The gene therapy syringe is disconnected and the saline syringe is connected to inject a few ml of saline over the same time period to flush the gene therapy drug out of the fluid path and into the patient. 13. The saline syringe is disconnected and the g. The drug and flush fluids are delivered as contrast syringe is reconnected to inject programmed. contrast to confirm that the catheter had not moved. 14. The catheter is then repositioned for the next h. The catheter is then repositioned for the next injections and steps 8-12 are repeated until all injections and steps d-g are repeated until all vessels are injected vessels are injected 15. The disposable parts of the system are disposed i. The disposable parts of the system are disposed of as biohazard material. of as biohazard material.
(57) Communications and control in the systems of the present invention can have various levels of sophistication based upon design, verification, economic, and usability considerations. A simple level involves centralized start/stop timing or synchronization between two or more devices. A next level can, for example, be centralized programming of one or more pumps to improve operator or user convenience. A next level can, for example, involve a common programming interface for all pumps. A next level can, for example, include standard protocols involving various synchronization strategies and allowing the operator to save and recall customized protocols. The systems of the present invention provide great flexibility for designers to meet user needs.
(58) Communications and control functions are shown schematically as coordinated by control unit 69a. However control can readily be distributed in another fashion. For example, angiographic injectors can monitor the ECG and synchronize the injection of contrast with the heart. The injector can then transmit the ECG signal or simple start-stop commands to drug pump 42 so that it can synchronize drug injection with the heart. Thus, some or all of the functions of the control unit 69a can be performed by the system pumps themselves in a distributed fashion at the convenience of the product designers or users. There need not be a specific box or piece of hardware that performs all, many or even any of the functions attributed to the control unit 69a. Control can be distributed.
(59) In certain situations, it can be advantageous to have contrast injector or pump 40, similar to that described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/982,518, filed on Oct. 18, 2001, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, be the primary controller, performing many of the functions of control unit 69a. In this embodiment, pumps 41 and 42 communicate to contrast pump 40 and all the operations described herein are achievable. The additional fluid delivery systems could be considered as accessories for the contrast pump 40.
(60) To check for proper fluid line purging, air detectors such as those available from Introtech of Edgewood, N.Y., can be included at various places along the fluid path.
(61) While the embodiments of the present invention described above include pumps that can be applied for the delivery of all the fluids related to a procedure, for either cost or historic preference, perception, or feelings of wanting to be in control, some of the pumping functions can be performed manually while others are performed mechanically. Specifically, many doctors prefer the manual feel and control of conducting the contrast injection. In this case only pumps 41 and 42 are used. Alternatively, mechanical delivery can be used and tactile feedback provided to the doctor to simulate the feel and control of manual operation. Tactile feedback is discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,840,026 and in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 09/982,518 and 10/237,139, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
(62) It is also possible to select the properties of a fluid path element, for example tubing 24a such that its volume is sufficient to hold the full volume of the drug to be delivered. In this case, the full volume of drug to be delivered in the single injection is relatively quickly injected into 24a, and then the flushing fluid is slowly infused via pump 41, pushing the drug into the patient at the desired controlled rate. Even if the volume of tubing 24a is not sufficient to hold the full volume of the drug, if the system knows the volume of fluid in the various tubings and pumps, it can operate pump 42 at an initially high rate until the drug is just about to exit the catheter, and then slow to the desired infusion rate. This saves time, and time is money.
(63) Thus it is evident that any one, several, all, or none of the fluids can be advantageously injected by pump and the remaining can be injected by hand if the user so desires.
(64) If there is a reason for the doctor or operator to prefer a hand injection of the drug, then the device of
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(66) To fill syringe 350 with a mixture of drug and saline, the user pushes the two vials completely into device 200. Then with the lever 250 connected to saline, the user pulls in sufficient saline to purge all air from the lines into the syringe. Then the user pushes the air and some of the saline back into the saline container until the desired amount of saline remains in the syringe. The user observes the syringe through the clear shroud 222. Now the user switches lever 250, which can, for example, be in operative connection with a valve 252 (see
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(68) Upon operation of pump 400, one or more of the fluids from chambers 510, 520 and 530 is transmitted to the patient via tubing 560 which is in fluid connection with a catheter (not shown). A second tubing line 570 can be provided to connect to a waste container 515 (similar in operation to waste container 55 of
(69) Pump 400 further includes a release latch 420 to enable disconnection of multi-chamber container 500 from pump 400. Pump 400 can further include controls 430 positioned upon the housing of pump 400 to control the operation thereof. Additionally or alternatively, a control unit remote from pump 400 can be provided. Although containers or reservoirs 510 and 520 and enclosure 530 are formed integrally in the embodiment of
(70) The system of
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(73) Syringe 800b can include a hazardous pharmaceutical. Syringe 800a can, for example, be in fluid connection with a fluid path 810, which is in fluid connection with a source of another fluid (for example, saline). Preferably syringe 800b with the hazardous drug comes with fluid connections already made, or has a fluid connection such as those shown in
(74) As used herein in connection with several of the various embodiments of the present invention, the term pump includes all means of causing a controlled fluid flow, including controlled pumps or pressure sources and regulators, for example peristaltic pumps, gear pumps, syringe pumps, electrokinetic pumps, gravity, compressed gas, controlled gas evolving devices, spring pumps, centripetal pumps or any system which does not require continuing human exertion of motive force when the fluid is flowing. A number of the aspects of the present invention can also be advantageously applied to hand activated pumps as well.
(75) Especially in cardiac studies, it is anticipated that more than one drug will beneficially be injected. Examples of additional drugs are cardiac stress agents, thrombolytic drugs, or drugs to decrease the chance of restenosis after angioplasty or stenting. As clear to one skilled in the art, injection of such additional substances can be accommodated by adding additional pumps, fluid reservoirs, and optionally communications lines to the systems described herein.
(76) Non-viral gene therapy approaches can also benefit from the features of the systems of the present invention. While not as hazardous, non-viral genes still may pose hazards to healthcare workers. Minis Corp. of Madison, Wis., has, for example, published animal results in which they inject DNA not contained in a virus into the limb arteries using higher flow rates and volumes than discussed above in connection with DNA transfected via a viral vector. At high flow rates and volumes (over 100 ml), a fluid delivery system using mechanical pumps is especially beneficial.
(77) There are also studies that discuss the injection of drugs or enzymes before injection of a gene therapy drug or other therapeutic agent. These pretreatment drugs can, for example, promote the migration or transfer of DNA from the blood vessel into the tissue. An example of such a pretreatment drug is an enzyme that breaks down collagen to make the blood vessels more porous to the gene's DNA. The systems of the present invention can be used to inject such pretreatment drugs.
(78) The fluid delivery system of the present invention can also be used to deliver gene therapy drugs for direct injection into the heart or other tissue. In The Scientist, 12[10]:4 May 11, 1998, for example, a treatment is disclosed involving the direct injection of a gene therapy drug into heart muscle during open-heart surgery using 14 separate insulin (low volume) syringes and needles. The systems of the invention can eliminate the labor, cost, and risk of filling all those syringes by allowing the operator to inject multiple times directly from a common reservoir. Instead of delivering fluid to catheter 31 in such a procedure, it can be delivered via a tube to a small needle that is inserted appropriately into the heart muscle (myocardium). This also provides the safety enhancement of always flushing the line with saline after the drug, so that when a connection is opened, it is saline flush that has the potential for spillage or aerosolization, rather than the hazardous drug. In a situation such as this, it is beneficial if the user interface tells the user when the injection has been completed, and the hazardous drug has been flushed from the line so that the connection can be opened or the needle removed.
(79) The fluid delivery system of this invention can also be used to deliver the fluid in connection with other gene uptake augmentation schemes, for example sonoporation, electroporation, or optically activated drug delivery strategies.
(80) The fluid delivery systems, devices and methods of the present invention have been generally described above using representative examples of injection of gene therapy drugs or agents. However, the systems, devices and methods of the present invention are not limited to gene therapy applications. The systems, devices and methods of the present invention can be used in many other drug delivery and therapeutic procedures. In general, the systems, devices and methods of the present invention are particularly suited for use in connection with any hazardous pharmaceutical or substance to be injected into a patient (human or animal). As used herein, the term pharmaceutical refers to any substance or drug to be injected or otherwise delivered into the body (either human or animal) in a medical procedure and includes, but is not limited to, substances used in imaging procedures (for example, contrast media), diagnostic, and therapeutic substances. As described above in connection with gene therapy agents, a number of such pharmaceutical substances pose a danger to both the patient and to the personnel administering the substance if not handled and/or injected properly. Examples of hazardous pharmaceuticals include, but are not limited to, radiopharmaceuticals, biological pharmaceuticals, proteins, cells (for example stem cells or myogenic cells), chemotherapeutic pharmaceuticals and gene therapeutic pharmaceuticals. Exemplary methods of administering hazardous pharmaceuticals include intra-arterial, intravenously, intramuscularly, subcutaneously, by respiration into the lungs, and transdermally. Even pharmaceuticals that are not considered to be extremely hazardous can be beneficially administered via this system and provide hospital personnel additional protection against adverse effects.
(81) The systems of the present invention can, for example, be applied to radiotherapy drugs or pharmaceuticals wherein the drug or pharmaceutical itself is radioactive. As clear to one skilled in the art, maintaining complete containment of radiotherapy pharmaceuticals promotes safety. If the drug or pharmaceutical is radioactive, the use of radiation absorbing or leaded Plexiglas shielding will help protect the operator and patient from unnecessary radiation dose. Designers skilled in the art of radiation shielding can readily specify the thicknesses needed. Containment of radiotherapy pharmaceutical is discussed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2003-0004463.
(82) When used in connection with thrombolytic pharmaceuticals, the systems of the present invention provide, for example, the benefit of integrated control and the ability to inject the thrombolytic pharmaceutical, to inject saline, and to periodically inject contrast to verify continued correct placement of the catheter.
(83) Likewise, the systems of the present invention can be advantageously applied to tumor and other chemotherapy in which the chemotherapy pharmaceutical is supplied to the vessels supplying a tumor or other region of interest. In the case of chemotherapy pharmaceuticals, the fluid volumes can be quite small and an occlusion balloon can be beneficial to slow or prevent the wash out of the chemotherapy from, for example, tumor tissue.
(84) The pharmaceuticals or drugs mentioned above, or other pharmaceuticals or drugs can be included in or associated with ultrasound bubbles. The system of the present invention can deliver the bubbles to the region of interest and then ultrasound energy can be used to destroy the bubbles and promote the delivery of the drug to the tissue. The uses of ultrasound bubbles to deliver and release a pharmaceutical to a region of interest is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,397,098, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
(85) The procedure of this invention has generally been described with liquid drugs, and can also apply to powdered drugs with either a liquid or gaseous vehicle, or gaseous drugs that are to be delivered to a recipient.
(86) A number of the hazardous pharmaceuticals for use in connection with the systems, devices and methods of the present invention can cause significant damage to the vessels into which they are injected. Certain antitumor chemotherapy pharmaceuticals, for example, are known to cause vessel damage when delivered through a peripheral venous catheter.
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(89) This flow sequence of saline and drug delivery can be continuous, until all the drug is delivered, or if desired, it can be repeated over time to spread out the drug delivery and give the patient's system an opportunity to accommodate itself to the drug, minimizing the side effects. This periodic pulsed delivery has several other advantages. For example, it is easier for an extravasation detection system to operate. Extravasation detector 1100 (represented schematically in
(90) The systems, devices and methods of the present invention have been described generally in connection with treatment of a human. However, the systems, devices and methods of the present invention can also be used to treat any animal or living system in which it is desirable to provide the benefits of convenience, consistency, and safety to the application of hazardous (for example, biohazardous or chemically hazardous) pharmaceuticals.
(91) An additional embodiment of the present invention is shown in
(92) By turning valve 1243 and operating syringes 1212 and 1211, hazardous drug and saline can be injected in sequence, as directed by the operator. While this embodiment does not have all the automatic features and safeguards of some of the other embodiments, it has the benefits of being totally disposable and having an initial lower cost than some of the devices that have reusable system components. Because syringe 1212 can be refilled in a safe manner from the drug container in the enclosure 1270, syringe 1212 can have a smaller volume and thus have a smaller diameter, which makes hand injections more accurate.
(93) Alternatively, the module 1200 can be adapted to fit onto a reusable motive device 1300, which could for example move the two syringe pistons and turn the valves so that operation is automated. For example, the module 1200 could be attached to the front of a device similar in operation to device 700 illustrated in
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(95) The connectors of
(96) Second member 1475 includes a penetrating member 1480. Penetrating member 1480 comprises a generally cylindrical penetrating element 1482 extending from a first end thereof. A passage 1484 is formed through penetrating element 1482 and the remainder of penetrating member 1480. The second end of penetrating member 1480 forms an extending member 1486 in fluid connection with passage 1482 to which a conduit or connector (not shown) such as flexible tubing or a luer connection can be attached.
(97) Second member 1480 also includes a swivel member 1490 rotatably connected to penetrating member 1480 as described above. Swivel member 1490 further includes threading 1492 on an interior surface thereof to cooperate with threading 1470 on first member 1455. Second member 1475 also includes opposing wing elements 1494 extending radially outward therefrom to facilitate rotation of second member 1475 relative to first member 1455 to form a threaded connection of first member 1455 and second member 1475.
(98) The cooperation of first member 4155 and second member 1475 to form an aseptic connection is illustrated, for example, in
(99) As the connector of U.S. Pat. No. 6,440,107 B1 is assembled, the air and thence aerosols or spillage in the space 1500 (see
(100) In the embodiment of
(101) The sealing members could be incorporated into the threads themselves, by being elastomeric so that a tight fit is achieved or hollow so that they can flex sufficiently. In addition, instead of many full rotations as shown in
(102) An alternative to incorporating a vent is to arrange for the air to enter the fluid path as the connector is brought together. Another alternative is to have sealing elements 1510 or 1520 incorporate open celled foam or other micro porous material such as Tyvek, preferably incorporating activated charcoal as well, so that the air can vent through or at the seal, but drug material cannot escape.
(103) Because positioning the angiographic catheter 31 of
(104) Although the present invention has been described in detail in connection with the above embodiments and/or examples, it should be understood that such detail is illustrative and not restrictive, and that those skilled in the art can make variations without departing from the invention. The scope of the invention is indicated by the following claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes and variations that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.