Abstract

IntroductionRight ventricle (RV) failure is one of the most common symptoms among patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (TOF). The current surgery treatment approach including pulmonary valve replacement (PVR) showed mixed post-surgery outcomes. A novel PVR surgical strategy using active contracting bands is proposed to improve the post-PVR outcome. In lieu of testing the risky surgical procedures on real patients, computational simulations (virtual surgery) using biomechanical ventricle models based on patient-specific cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) data were performed to test the feasibility of the PVR procedures with active contracting bands. Different band combination and insertion options were tested to identify optimal surgery designs.MethodCardiac magnetic resonance data were obtained from one TOF patient (male, age 23) whose informed consent was obtained. A total of 21 finite element models were constructed and solved following our established procedures to investigate the outcomes of the band insertion surgery. The non-linear anisotropic Mooney–Rivlin model was used as the material model. Five different band insertion plans were simulated (three single band models with different band locations, one model with two bands, and one model with three bands). Three band contraction ratios (10, 15, and 20%) and passive bands (0% contraction ratio) were tested. RV ejection fraction was used as the measure for cardiac function.ResultsThe RV ejection fraction from the three-band model with 20% contraction increased to 41.58% from the baseline of 37.38%, a 4.20% absolute improvement. The RV ejection fractions from the other four band models with 20% contraction rate were 39.70, 39.45, and 40.70% (two-band) and 39.17%, respectively. The mean RV stress and strain values from all of the 21 models showed only modest differences (5–11%).ConclusionThis pilot study demonstrated that the three-band model with 20% band contraction ratio led to 4.20% absolute improvement in the RV ejection fraction, which is considered as clinically significant. The passive elastic bands led to the reduction of the RV ejection fractions. The modeling results and surgical strategy need to be further developed and validated by a multi-patient study and animal experiments before clinical trial could become possible. Tissue regeneration techniques are needed to produce materials for the contracting bands.

Highlights

  • Right ventricle (RV) failure is one of the most common symptoms among patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (TOF)

  • We introduced a RV model for patients with TOF with a fluid–structure interaction (Tang et al, 2008; Tang et al, 2013; Yang et al, 2013; Tang et al, 2015; Yu et al, 2019)

  • The cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) image was acquired from one TOF patient before and after pulmonary valve replacement (PVR) surgery using electrocardiography-gated, breath-hold, steady-state, cine precession magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

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Summary

Introduction

Right ventricle (RV) failure is one of the most common symptoms among patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (TOF). A novel PVR surgical strategy using active contracting bands is proposed to improve the post-PVR outcome. Many long-time repaired TOF survivors are left with residual hemodynamic lesions including pulmonary regurgitation and high ventricle blood pressure, which are major causes of late-onset heart failure (Kim and Emily, 2016). Del Nido proposed a scar removal and RV remodeling technique to improve post-PVR surgical outcome. In their clinical trial (NIH 5P50HL074734, Geva and del Nido), 64 patients with repaired TOF and who fulfilled the defined criteria for PVI/PVR were randomly assigned to undergo either PVI/PVR alone (n = 34) or PVI/PVR with surgical RV remodeling (n = 30). Due to the complexity of the RV structure and the surgical procedures, effective PVR procedures are needed to improve the post-PVR outcome

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