3D modelling of drug-coated balloons for the treatment of calcified superficial femoral arteries

PLoS One. 2021 Oct 11;16(10):e0256783. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0256783. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Background/objectives: Drug-coated balloon therapy for diseased superficial femoral arteries remains controversial. Despite its clinical relevance, only a few computational studies based on simplistic two-dimensional models have been proposed to investigate this endovascular therapy to date. This work addresses the aforementioned limitation by analyzing the drug transport and kinetics occurring during drug-coated balloon deployment in a three-dimensional geometry.

Methods: An idealized three-dimensional model of a superficial femoral artery presenting with a calcific plaque and treated with a drug-coated balloon was created to perform transient mass transport simulations. To account for the transport of drug (i.e. paclitaxel) released by the device, a diffusion-reaction equation was implemented by describing the drug bound to specific intracellular receptors through a non-linear, reversible reaction. The following features concerning procedural aspects, pathologies and modelling assumptions were investigated: (i) balloon application time (60-180 seconds); (ii) vessel wall composition (healthy vs. calcified wall); (iii) sequential balloon application; and (iv) drug wash-out by the blood stream vs. coating retention, modeled as exponential decay.

Results: The balloon inflation time impacted both the free and specifically-bound drug concentrations in the vessel wall. The vessel wall composition highly affected the drug concentrations. In particular, the specifically-bound drug concentration was four orders of magnitude lower in the calcific compared with healthy vessel wall portions, primarily as a result of reduced drug diffusion. The sequential application of two drug-coated balloons led to modest differences (~15%) in drug concentration immediately after inflation, which became negligible within 10 minutes. The retention of the balloon coating increased the drug concentration in the vessel wall fourfold.

Conclusions: The overall findings suggest that paclitaxel kinetics may be affected not only by the geometrical and compositional features of the vessel treated with the drug-coated balloon, but also by balloon design characteristics and procedural aspects that should be carefully considered.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Angioplasty, Balloon / instrumentation*
  • Coated Materials, Biocompatible
  • Drug Delivery Systems / instrumentation*
  • Drug Liberation
  • Equipment Design
  • Femoral Artery / drug effects
  • Femoral Artery / surgery*
  • Humans
  • Models, Biological
  • Paclitaxel / administration & dosage
  • Paclitaxel / pharmacokinetics
  • Tubulin Modulators / administration & dosage
  • Tubulin Modulators / pharmacokinetics
  • Vascular Calcification / surgery
  • Vascular Calcification / therapy*

Substances

  • Coated Materials, Biocompatible
  • Tubulin Modulators
  • Paclitaxel

Grants and funding

MC, AC and CC have been supported by Fondazione Cariplo (https://www.fondazionecariplo.it/en/index.html), Italy (Grant no. 2017-0792, TIME). SM and FM have been partially supported from EPSRC (https://epsrc.ukri.org/), United Kingdom (Grant no. EP/S030875/1).