Abstract

ObjectiveIdeal heart valve solutions aim to provide thrombosis-free durability. A scaffold-based polycarbonate urethane urea tissue-engineered heart valve designed to mimic native valve microstructure and function was used. This study examined the acute in vivo function of a stented tissue-engineered heart valve in a porcine model. MethodsTrileaflet valves were fabricated by electrospinning polycarbonate urethane urea using double component fiber deposition. The tissue-engineered heart valve was mounted on an AZ31 magnesium alloy biodegradable stent frame. Five 80-kg Yorkshire pigs underwent open tissue-engineered heart valve implantation on cardiopulmonary bypass in the pulmonary position. Tissue-engineered heart valve function was echocardiographically evaluated immediately postimplant and at planned study end points at 1, 4, 8, and 12 hours. Explanted valves underwent biaxial mechanical testing and scanning electron microscopy for ultrastructural analysis and thrombosis detection. ResultsAll 5 animals underwent successful valve implantation. All were weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass, closed, and recovered until harvest study end point except 1 animal that was found to have congenital tricuspid valve dysplasia and that was euthanized postimplant. All 5 cases revealed postcardiopulmonary bypass normal leaflet function, no regurgitation, and an average peak velocity of 2 m/s, unchanged at end point. All tissue-engineered heart valve leaflets retained microstructural architecture with no platelet activation or thrombosis by scanning electron microscopy. There was microscopic evidence of fibrin deposition on 2 of 5 stent frames, not on the tissue-engineered heart valve. Biaxial stress examination revealed retained postimplant mechanics of tissue-engineered heart valve fibers without functional or ultrastructural degradation. ConclusionsA biodegradable elastomeric heart valve scaffold for in situ tissue-engineered leaflet replacement is acutely functional and devoid of leaflet microthrombosis.

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