BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates generally to stents that are implantable or deployable in a vessel or duct within the body of a patient to maintain the lumen of the duct or vessel open, and more particularly to improvements in stent structures.[0002]
When inserted and deployed in a vessel, duct or tract of the body, for example a coronary artery after dilatation of the artery by balloon angioplasty, a stent acts as a prosthesis to maintain the vessel, duct or tract (generally referred to as a vessel for convenience herein) open. The stent has the form of an open-ended tubular element with openings through its sidewall to enable its expansion from a first outside diameter which is sufficiently small to allow it to be navigated through the vessel to a target site where it is to be deployed, to a deployed second outside diameter sufficiently large to engage the inner lining of the vessel for retention at the target site.[0003]
An occluded coronary artery, for example, is typically attributable to a buildup of fatty deposits or plaque on the inner lining of the vessel. A balloon angioplasty procedure is the treatment of choice to compress the deposits against the inner lining of the vessel to open the lumen. Alternatively, removal of plaque may be achieved by laser angioplasty, or by rotationally cutting the material into finely divided particles which are dispersed in the blood stream. For a large segment of patients undergoing the procedure, traditional angioplasty has resulted in new blockage of the treated vessel only a relatively short time thereafter, attributable to trauma to the blood vessel wall from the original procedure. The mechanism responsible for this restenosis or re-occlusion of the vessel lumen is intimal hyperplasia, a rapid proliferation of smooth muscle cells in the affected region of the wall.[0004]
To maintain the vessel open, it has become customary to install one or more stents at the trauma site at the time of or shortly after the angioplasty procedure is performed. The stenting procedure is recommended for virtually all patients, since those who are predisposed to restenosis are not readily identifiable at the outset. Typically, deployment of the stent is performed by radial expansion under outwardly directed radial pressure exerted, for example, by inflating the balloon of a catheter on which the stent is mounted for implanting in the patient. The expansion is such that the stent engages the inner lining or inwardly facing surface of the vessel wall. The structural characteristics of the stent give it sufficient resilience to allow some contraction from its expanded diameter after the balloon is deflated and the catheter removed from the body, but also adequate stiffness to largely resist the natural recoil of the vessel wall.[0005]
Unfortunately, the very presence of the stent in the vessel tends to promote thrombus formation as blood flows through the vessel, which results in an acute blockage. At the outward facing surface of the stent in contact or engagement with the inner lining of the vessel, tissue irritation can exacerbate restenosis attributable to hyperplasia. With current techniques, thrombosis, clotting, and restenosis attributable to installation of the device are reduced or even eliminated by use of drug-eluting stents, and to a somewhat lesser extent, by appropriate choice of the surface characteristics of the stent.[0006]
Selection of the material or materials of which the stent is composed is also affected by a patient's allergic reaction. A statistically significant percentage of the patient population who are candidates for stents suffer may severe allergic reaction to common stent materials, including chromium, nickel, and even medical grade[0007]316L stainless steel, which contains about 16% nickel. Implanting a stent composed of these materials in such patients is contra-indicated.
Another consideration in material selection is the need for stent fluoroscopic visibility during the implant procedure, to allow the implanting physician to avoid binding while the stent is navigated on its catheter through the vessel, and to deploy the stent when the desired target site is reached, as well as to permit it to be viewed in periodic examinations of the patient. Thickness of the stent wall is governed not only to enable the stent to withstand vessel wall recoil following deployment, but to assure adequate visibility with fluoroscopy. Nevertheless, the composition and thickness of the stent wall must also take into account sufficient flexibility to allow the stent to be maneuvered through narrow vessels without binding, and to be deployed under balloon pressurization that will not unduly risk the possibility of rupture.[0008]
It follows that a suitable stent for successful interventional placement should possess features of good radiopacity and freedom from distortion during magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), flexibility with suitable elasticity to be plastically deformable, resistance to vessel recoil, sufficient thinness to minimize obstruction to flow of blood (or other fluid or material in vessels other than the cardiovascular system), biocompatibility to avoid vessel re-occlusion, and avoidance of allergic reaction. As noted above, stent structural design and material selection play a critical role in influencing these features.[0009]
Aside from vascular usage, other ducts or tracts of the human body in which a stent may be installed to maintain an open lumen include the tracheo-bronchial system, the biliary hepatic system, the esophageal bowel system, and the urinary tract. Many of the same requirements are found in these other endoluminal usages of stents.[0010]
It is quite apparent that technological innovation has yielded considerable progress in the field of interventional cardiology in recent years, such as the successful solution to one of the major problems of restenosis with the advent of drug-eluting stents. Recent clinical trials and usage following regulatory approvals have identified at least two or three different drugs that, when present in a coating on the implanted stent, are locally released from the coating and display a marked capability to inhibit restenosis. Still, bare metal stents remain in use and are implanted and continue to be implanted in large numbers of patients, with resulting restenosis and need for re-intervention that varies between 15% to 40% of patients, depending on vessel size, length (in size) of the stenosis, presence or absence of diabetes, and number and location of stents deployed in the patient. Recent clinical trials have demonstrated that less than 10% of patients receiving implants of drug-eluting stents suffered restenosis during the reporting period, even in patients with small vessels, diabetes, or long (large) stenoses.[0011]
A prerequisite of such improved patient response, however, is a need to maintain close contact of the surface of the implanted stent with the vessel wall. The delivery of the drug(s) from the stent coating is a local rather than systemic phenomenon, in which the stent coating releases a highly lipophilic (hydrophobic) drug that diffuses into the vessel wall in the locale, or immediate vicinity, of the stent implant. It is therefore mandatory that a multitude of small cells, not further away from each other than about 0.5 to 1.0 mm, provide this coverage of the vessel area. If a single stent is implanted, the coverage of the vessel wall and its impregnation by the drug is sufficient, as common trials have shown.[0012]
Unfortunately, however, much of the vascular stenosis found in patients involves not merely one vessel, but several sites. Classically, one of the sites for development of restenosis or of an arteriosclerosis is the bifurcation, shown schematically in FIG. 1A, where a vessel branches off and divides into either two vessels or a[0013]main vessel10 and a side branch11. Arteriosclerotic masses orstenoses8 are present in bothvessel10 and side branch11 at the bifurcation. Side branches in the coronary arteries very rarely undergo a 90-degree angulation at take off, but rather, much closer to a 45-degree branching angulation from the main vessel, as shown, by way of example, as angle θ in FIG. 1A.
This Figure illustrates the principle dilemma encountered for side branch stenting. The distribution of[0014]arteriosclerotic masses8 in side branch11 are shown as they normally develop. Amass8 is present in themain vessel10, butother masses8 are present as well, include the branching off of side branch at11 at its origin and its proximal and distal sites. To increase the diameter of the main vessel, a balloon catheter is inserted and/or a stent is implanted, to squeeze these masses into he wall of the vessel. The vessel is over-expanded at the site where the stent is implanted, and this provides excellent mechanical scaffolding, which resists reduction in diameter of the vessel from naturally-occurring vessel recoil. But correction of the condition in the side branch is more complex.
FIGS. 1B-1G are schematic diagrams useful in illustrating some of the different techniques attempted in the past to treat stenoses at the branching of a vessel into two vessels or into a main vessel and side branch.[0015]
FIGS. 1B and 1C represent the first two steps common to a sequence of steps that ends with a step illustrated in respective ones of the remaining four parts of FIG. 1.[0016]
In FIG. 1B, a[0017]stent12 is implanted to cover the lesion (stenosis or arteriosclerotic mass, e.g., already subjected to an angioplasty procedure) in themain vessel10 only, such that the stent also covers the opening of the side branch11 by a so-called bridging at14.
In FIG. 1C, a[0018]tiny guide wire15 is advanced through an opening between the struts of thestent12 in themain vessel10, so that the guide wire penetrates into the side branch11, and a balloon dilatation is performed by running a balloon catheter over the guide wire into the side branch11 followed by an angioplasty procedure attarget site16.
In FIG. 1D, a[0019]stent17 mounted on a balloon catheter (not shown), which could be the same balloon catheter used for the angioplasty procedure in FIG. 1C, is guided (over theguide wire15, not shown in FIG. 1D to reduce unnecessary cluffer) between struts ofstent12 in themain vessel10 into side branch11 and deployed in the side branch, in the form of a T-like implant.
In FIG. 1E, an alternative arrangement to that of FIG. 1D is illustrated, to implant[0020]stent12 in themain vessel10 andstent17 in the side branch11 such that each stent starts (i.e., has its proximal end) at theplace19 where the bifurcation into the two vessels begins.
In another alternative arrangement, shown in FIG. 1F,[0021]stent12 is implanted in themain vessel10 as in FIG. 1C, andstent17 is implanted throughstent12 in such a way that each stent covers themain vessel10 in its respective proximal part, withstent12 overlyingstent17. The mesh ofstent12 through whichstent17 is installed is opened by inflating the deployment balloon (not shown) through the opening from themain vessel10 to the side branch11, so as to enable blood to flow from the main vessel into and through the side branch.
A similar alternative, shown in FIG. 1G, involves a crush technique. Here,[0022]stent12 implanted in themain vessel10 is completely squeezed to the side bystent17 implanted into the side branch11, but an adequate opening exists in the main vessel at the point of the crushedstent12 to allow blood to flow through that path as well as through the side branch.
None of these techniques has been shown to have long-term merit, whether with stainless steel (bare metal) stents or with drug coated (drug-eluting) stents. The side branch[0023]11 usually has a diameter about 25-75% of the diameter of themain vessel10.
The long-term results of treating bifurcated lesions including a side branch have not been satisfactory. Either an uncovered area is left at the[0024]proximal triangle20 of the side branch11 (e.g., FIG. 1D, and also FIGS. 1C, 1E, regarding a similar problem), the size of which depends on the angulation of the side branch bifurcation, which leaveslesions8 ready to proliferate again; or too much metal is present in the vessel. In the former case, implanting a stent at the distal origin of the side branch, as shown in FIG. 1D, is inadequate to fully cover the inner wall of the side branch in that vicinity because of its geometry. And in the latter case, such as where two stents are implanted so as to overlap each other for full coverage, as in FIGS. 1F and 1G, the resulting large amount of metal in the vessel has yielded very poor results clinically. Even drug coated stents have their limitation in application involving bifurcated lesions.
This inadequacy has two consequences. First, the masses that are squeezed by the stent into the side wall of the artery tend to protrude at any unprotected and uncovered site, making the results of stenting unsatisfactory, not only on an acute basis but also long term. Initial results with drug coated stents also show that restenosis actually develops exactly at this uncovered area. This is attributable to the fact that the restenosis-hindering drug is delivered (eluted) from the stent coating and its distribution into the vessel wall is confined to the immediate vicinity of the stent struts. Accordingly, the uncovered[0025]triangle20 lacks receipt of adequate medication to inhibit proliferation of smooth muscle cells, and restenosis occurs at this location.
Another problem encountered in the past has been that stents are made of stainless steel, which has a rather low radiopacity. Therefore, the stainless steel stent wall diameter must be in a range from 90 to 140 micrometers, which, although this is sufficiently thin and flexible to be advanced through a small artery, in principle, a stent strut thickness of 80 or of even 50 μm would better serve the purpose with greater flexibility and adequate mechanical strength to withstand vessel recoil. But stainless steel stents of such thinness are barely visible, if at all, under fluoroscopy.[0026]
Recent developments in stent composition and materials have led to stents that provide a better image than experienced with the bare stainless steel variety in the fluoroscopic catheterization laboratory setting, as well as reduced wall thickness and concomitant greater flexibility, without sacrificing mechanical strength in the radial direction. These advances are achieved, for example, by either a stainless steel stent with a thin layer of appropriate material of greater radiopacity, such as gold, tantalum, or platinum, which allows the stainless steel base material wall to be made considerably thinner without sacrificing fluoroscopic visibility, as disclosed in patent U.S. Pat. No. 6,099,561 to the applicant herein. Alternatively, use of materials of higher density, such as niobium with a small amount of zirconium as disclosed in the '815 patent, or of multiple sandwich layers of materials having greater radiopacity, which allows the stent to be fabricated with smaller diameter and thinner wall dimension. Other materials that serve this purpose include new alloys of steel and platinum or of cobalt alloyed with chrome, nickel, and molybdenum, or noble metal coatings such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,099,561, issued Aug. 8, 2000, also to the applicant herein. The increased visibility of the stent with these new compositions and techniques applies not only to the stent as a whole, but even to its individual struts.[0027]
It is therefore a principal aim of the present invention to describe a system that overcomes the current limitations of side branch stenting.[0028]
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONA presently preferred embodiment of the invention resides in a cooperative stent adapted to be implanted in a patient's body into an acutely angled side branch at a junction of bifurcation from a main vessel, duct or tract. The cooperative stent has an acutely angled end adapted to reside against a portion of a separate main stent implanted in the main vessel, duct or tract bridging the bifurcation junction, such that the cooperative stent when implanted fully covers the inner wall surface of the side branch at the bifurcation junction, with negligible gaps. The stent may be termed “cooperative” in the sense that it cooperates with the main stent to fully cover the lesion present in the main vessel, duct or tract and the side branch at the bifurcation thereof.[0029]
The acute angle of the acutely angled end is approximately 45°. And the end of the cooperative stent opposite the acutely angled end is at a different angle from the acute angle, preferably a right angle, relative to the longitudinal axis of the stent. Thus, the acutely angled end of the stent has a short side and a long side connected via an imaginary plane that cuts through the wall of the stent at that end. At least one of the short side and the long side may have an identifying radiopaque parameter or enhanced visibility characteristic to enable viewing and properly orienting the cooperative stent during implant thereof in the side branch. Indeed, the entire stent may be fabricated from material having enhanced radiopacity without sacrificing thinness, such as observed in the aforementioned '774 application[0030]
Preferably also, the outer surface of the cooperative stent has a coating that includes a drug selected to inhibit restenosis, for elution of the drug from the stent when it is implanted in the side branch. Additionally, the acutely angled end of the cooperative stent is adapted to reside against the main stent at an opening along the portion thereof that bridges the bifurcation, to allow a portion of fluid carried by the main vessel, duct or tract, such as blood in the case of coronary artery, to flow relatively unobstructed through the bifurcation junction into the side branch.[0031]
In essence, the preferred embodiment may be characterized as a stent having a single straight tubular wall patterned with a plurality of interconnected struts having voids therebetween, and a pair of openings at opposite ends of the wall, the ends being skewed relative to one another. One of the skewed ends has either a fluoroscopically visible marker for properly orienting the stent during implantation, or enhanced visibility as a whole.[0032]
Alternatively, the stent may be characterized as a single tube with a multiplicity of through-holes in its side, and one of its two open ends skewed relative to its side, whereby to enable the stent to be implanted in mating relation to the geometry of a side branch similarly skewed relative to a main blood vessel at a bifurcation thereof. And the one skewed end is fluoroscopically identifiable to enable proper orientation of the stent during implantation in the side branch.[0033]
According to another aspect of the invention, the stent adapted to be implanted in a side branch at the skewed bifurcation from a main blood vessel in a patient's body, is mounted on a stent delivery system, preferably a balloon catheter, for navigation through the main vessel and deployment of the stent in the side branch at the bifurcation. One of the stent's open ends is angled to match the skew of the bifurcation of the side branch; and the stent is mounted on the balloon catheter with its matching angled end positioned proximally on the catheter. At least one of the stent or the balloon catheter has a fluoroscopically visible characteristic or marker at the matching angled end of the mounted stent for properly orienting the stent during its deployment in the side branch. Alternatively, at least one of the stent and the balloon catheter has fluoroscopically identifiable markers at the shorter and longer sides of the matching angled end of the mounted stent to facilitate rotation of the catheter and proper orientation of the stent for deployment in the side branch. A radiopaque characteristic or marker may also be present at the opposite end (the right-angled end) of the stent, either on the stent itself or on the balloon or catheter immediately adjacent that end of the stent.[0034]
Yet another aspect of the invention resides in a method of implanting a stent in a side branch at a skewed bifurcation from a main blood vessel in a patient's body. A first step of the method involves navigating a balloon catheter through the main vessel to the bifurcation. A stent is mounted on the catheter with the stent's matching angled end to the skew of the side branch bifurcation positioned proximally on the catheter. The navigation of the catheter continues until the stent is positioned in the side branch at the bifurcation. Next, the catheter is rotated to an extent necessary to orient the stent's matching angled end for substantially complete coverage of the inner wall of the side branch at the bifurcation. Finally, the stent is deployed against the inner wall of the side branch to effect that coverage by inflating the balloon of the catheter, and the balloon is then deflated and the catheter is withdrawn, leaving the stent in place.[0035]
Still another aspect of the invention pertains to the manufacture of a stent specifically adapted for implantation in a side branch at the origin of the bifurcation thereof from a main vessel, wherein the manufacture or fabrication of the side branch stent is preferably carried out by starting with a single metal tube of appropriate length, diameter and wall thickness and having at least one of its open ends angled at 90° (or approximately so) relative to the longitudinal axis of the tube. The sidewall of the tube is then patterned with a multiplicity of through holes either before or after the other open end of the tube is cut at an acute angle chosen to match the skew angle of the side branch bifurcation from the main vessel, nominally[0036]450. The through-hole pattern is produced such that the tube diameter may be expanded from its starting dimension, which is sufficiently small to allow the tube to be inserted (by means of a stent delivery system) into a vessel, duct or tract of the patient's body designated to undergo a stenting procedure, to a diameter of adequate dimension when deployed to hold the side branch lumen open for fluid (e.g., blood) flow therethrough. The final stent may be coated with a know drug or carrier of a drug suitable for elution from the stent when in place in the side branch to inhibit stenosis or restenosis of the side branch inner wall. The acute skew-matching angle of what is to be the proximal end of the stent when implanted, is preferable formed at an angle of 45°, since that angle serves to match the large majority of skews of bifurcations from a main vessel, and will allow an inventory of the side branch stents to be maintained at the place where stenting procedures are to be performed, without a need for custom fabrication or maintaining inventories of such stents with various acute angled ends. However, different angulations other than 45° are feasible and beneficial as well.
Therefore, it is a principal aim of the present invention to provide a stent that is designed to give full coverage of the inner wall of a side branch at the skewed bifurcation of the side branch from a main vessel, with no or only negligible gap relative to a stent bridging the bifurcation in the main vessel.[0037]
Another aim is to provide a stent with one its open ends angled to match the skew of the bifurcation of a side branch in which the stent is to be implanted from a main vessel.[0038]
Still another aim of the invention is to provide a stent mounted on a balloon catheter with an end of the stent, angled to match the bifurcation skew of a side branch at which the stent is to be deployed, positioned proximally on the catheter.[0039]
Yet another aim is to provide a method of implanting a stent in a skewed bifurcation from a main vessel for substantially full coverage of the side branch wall at the bifurcation against which the stent is deployed, regardless of the angle of the skew.[0040]
It is noteworthy that the technical problems associated with side branch stenting have been studied extensively, and many proposed solutions have been advanced in the prior art, but none of these proposals rises to the level of the solution advanced by applicant herein. Examples of the prior art proposals are set forth below.[0041]
US patent application 2003/0187494 of Loaldi, titled “Endoluminal Device for Delivering and Deploying an Endoluminal Expandable Prosthesis,” published Oct. 2, 2003, describes a device that has enhanced delivery capacity. FIG. 55 of this patent application shows two stents implanted next to each other to fit the shape of a bifurcation and to cover two branches, but not the main vessel. The application discusses device operation with two wires, and the practicality of deploying into two different sites.[0042]
US patent application 2003/0181972 of Re, published Sep. 25, 2003, describes an MRI and x-ray compatible stent material of tungsten-rhenium that provides increased stent visibility, but no side branch stenting by special means.[0043]
US patent application 2003/0097169 of Brucker et al., titled “Bifurcated Stent and Delivery System,” published May 22, 2003, discloses how bifurcation into one main stent integrates the side branch stent.[0044]
US patent application US 2003/0009209 of Hojeibane, titled “Bifurcated Axially Flexible Stent,” published Jan. 9, 2003, describes in FIG. 11 a stent with asymmetric ends having two different angulations.[0045]
US application US2002/0095208 of Gregorich et al., titled “Stent,” published Jul. 18, 2002, describes a stent that allow side branch access, but has angular ends on both its sides.[0046]
Various bifurcated stent designs are described, for example, in patents U.S. Pat. No. 6,086,611; U.S. Pat. No. 6,129,738; U.S. Pat. No. 6,602,225; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,540,779B2. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,514,281 a single Y member is used to cover a bifurcation by means of a single stent that extends into both vessels. U.S. Pat. No. 6,080,191 to Summers also discloses a two-legged stent, as do U.S. Pat. No. 4,994,071; U.S. Pat. No. 5,749,825; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,755,771.[0047]
U.S. Pat. No. 6,540,777 evaluates and suggests a locker mechanism for stents.[0048]
Generally, these suggestions configure the acute technical implantation outcome, but fail to consider the long-term consequences of stenting a side branch for local smooth muscle cell growth, the shifting of plaque material, or the requirements of drug-coated stents. Moreover, none of the prior art designs of which the applicant herein is aware, with the possible exception of the radiopaque tungsten material of US patent application 2003/0181972, discuss a need or desire for increased visibility. Additionally, use of a marker to identify more closely the location and position of an endovascular graft supported by a stent, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,361,557 is only to address a concern for graft placement.[0049]