Abstract

Fully bioresorbable vascular scaffolds (BVS) are attractive platforms for the treatment of ischemic artery disease owing to their intrinsic ability to uncage the treated vessel after the initial scaffolding phase, thereby allowing for the physiological conditioning that is essential to cellular function and vessel healing. Although scaffold erosion confers distinct advantages over permanent endovascular devices, high transient by-product concentrations within the arterial wall could induce inflammatory and immune responses. To better understand these risks, we developed in this study an integrated computational model that characterizes the bulk degradation and by-product fate for a representative BVS composed of poly(L-lactide) (PLLA). Parametric studies were conducted to evaluate the relative impact of PLLA degradation rate, arterial remodeling, and metabolic activity on the local lactic acid (LA) concentration within arterial tissue. The model predicts that both tissue remodeling and PLLA degradation kinetics jointly modulate LA fate and suggests that a synchrony of these processes could minimize transient concentrations within local tissue. Furthermore, simulations indicate that LA metabolism is a relatively poor tissue clearance mechanism compared to convective and diffusive transport processes. Mechanistic understanding of factors governing by-product fate may provide further insights on clinical outcome and facilitate development of future generation scaffolds.

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