Percutaneous Cavopulmonary Assist: From Design to 96 Hour Survival in Lethal Cavopulmonary Failure Sheep

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We are developing a clinically practical percutaneous double lumen cannula (DLC)–based cavopulmonary assist (CPA) system to support failing Fontan patients. In this study, our CPA DLC was redesigned for even blood flow, minimal recirculation, and easy insertion/deployment. After bench testing, this new CPA system was evaluated for 4 hours (n = 10) and 96 hours (n = 5) in our clinically relevant lethal cavopulmonary failure (CPF) sheep model for ease of cannulation/deployment, reversal of CPF hemodynamics/end-organ hypoperfusion, and durability/biocompatibility. Cavopulmonary failure was achieved in all sheep. All DLCs were successfully inserted/deployed into Fontan anatomy. Cavopulmonary assist reversed CPF with normalized central venous pressure and cardiac output. All survival sheep were ambulatory with normal eating/drinking. One sheep was euthanized after 6 hours from cannula kinking, and one sheep died of hypokalemia after 8 hours. Three sheep survived 96 hours with normal hemodynamics. Free hemoglobin was only 3.7 ± 1.2 mg/dl at 96 hours, indicating negligible hemolysis. Creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and lactate increased from hypoperfusion but normalized by 72 hours CPA. Necropsy showed only a small, immobilized thrombus ring at umbrella attachment to DLC. Our DLC-based system provided total ambulatory CPA in a lethal CPF sheep model with 96 hour survival and complete reversal of hemodynamics and end-organ hypoperfusion.

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