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Phosphorylcholine surface modified flow diverter associated with reduced intimal hyperplasia

Authors :
Erin T. Langan
Miklos G. Marosfoi
Takamitsu Tamura
Pedro Lylyk
Frédéric Clarençon
Matthew J. Gounis
Olivia W. Brooks
John Wainwright
Laurent Spelle
Ajit S. Puri
Robert M. King
Jildaz Caroff
Source :
Journal of neurointerventional surgery. 10(11)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

BackgroundOptical coherence tomography (OCT) is a high-resolution, intra-vascular diagnostic technique widely used for the characterization of vascular pathologies and optimization of stent implantation during percutaneous coronary intervention. OCT was used to investigate the in vivo vascular response to a new phosphorylcholine surface modified flow diverter (sPED).MethodsIn an in vivo rabbit aneurysmal model, we used two different types of flow diverters (classic Pipeline – cPED; and sPED) with or without dual antiplatelet therapy (four groups, n=10 per group). OCT cross-sectional area measurements were compared with histology in all animals. Neointimal hyperplasia (NIH) ratio was compared between OCT and histology at five different levels for each stent. The severity of NIH was also compared between the different stents, antiplatelet protocols, and vessel locations.ResultsOCT was used to calculate in-stent hyperplasia in 227 different locations corresponding to histology sections. OCT measurement strongly correlated with gold standard histology (r2=0.83; slope=0.988; PConclusionOCT is a promising technique for immediate and long-term evaluation of flow diverter stent treatments. In an animal model, phosphorylcholine surface modified flow diverters induces less NIH after stent implant without reducing aneurysm occlusion rates.

Details

ISSN :
17598486
Volume :
10
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurointerventional surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....694c7c038620b25a99f248aa7f6c2f29