 |
| The
MicroMed DeBakey VAD® functions as a "bridge to heart
transplant" by
pumping blood throughout the body to
keep critically ill patients alive until
a donor heart is available. |
An estimated
one million people worldwide have heart conditions
that would benefit from a heart transplant. However,
the number of donor hearts available is extremely limited, with less
than 3,000 total transplants performed each year in the United States.
Fortunately, for people with such heart problems, a unique collaboration
between NASA, Dr. Michael DeBakey, Dr. George Noon, and MicroMed Technology,
Inc., has resulted in a lifesaving heart pump for patients awaiting
transplants. The MicroMed DeBakey VAD® is a ventricular assist device that functions as a "bridge
to heart transplant" by
pumping blood throughout the body to keep critically
ill patients alive until a donor heart is available.
The concept
for the tiny pump grew from conversations between Dave Saucier, an
engineer at Johnson Space Center, and Drs. DeBakey and Noon, famed
heart surgeons at Baylor College of Medicine. They discussed creating
a heart pump that would benefit patients with congestive heart failure.
Saucier and a team of Johnson engineers joined with DeBakey, Noon,
and colleagues at the DeBakey Heart Center at Baylor College to develop
the initial design. The Johnson team built several versions of the
device, based on the criteria and feedback supplied by DeBakey's medical
team.
During the
initial development of the implantable axial rotary heart pump, engineers
found two major concerns. Friction led to damaged blood cells, because
the device created high shear flows through pump parts. Also, there
were stagnant regions in the pump that caused blood clotting, a major
problem with ventricular assist devices.
To solve
these problems, help came from researchers Cetin
Kiris and Dochan Kwak in the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division
at Ames Research Center. Kwak, chief of the NAS Applications Branch,
explained that they were asked to help because of their "experience
with simulating fluid flow through rocket engines." According
to Kiris, "The
speed of fluid flow through a rocket engine is
faster than blood flow, but very similar in many ways."
Using NASA
supercomputers and computational fluid dynamics
technology, which models the fuel and oxidizer flow through rocket
engines such as the Space Shuttle main engine, the Ames researchers
analyzed blood flow through the battery-powered heart pump. Based
on the results, they suggested design improvements that reduced red
blood cell damage to an amount well below acceptable limits. The improved
blood flow pattern also reduced the tendency for blood clots to form
by eliminating the stagnant regions. According to Kwak, "There
are three groups who made this initial engineering effort successfulthe
medical team led by Dr. Michael DeBakey and Dr.
George Noon, the systems engineers at Johnson Space Center, and the
Ames computational team that used NASA supercomputer know-how to help
develop the VAD."
The road
to commercial success for the VAD began in 1996, when NASA patented
the heart pump and licensed it exclusively to MicroMed Technology,
Inc., of Houston, Texas. MicroMed, organized by President and Chief
Executive Officer Dallas Anderson to further develop the pump for
critically ill heart patients, faced the challenge of converting the
engineering device into a medical appliance that could be implanted.
Within 2 years, MicroMed obtained international quality and electronic
standards certifications, developed the ancillary components of the
system, and received regulatory permission to begin clinical trials
in Europe. In November 1998, a 56-year-old male was the first patient
implanted with the MicroMed DeBakey VAD. According to Anderson, the
pump functioned normally and to design specifications.
After 135
implants in Europe, MicroMed's product is commercially available at
12 European heart centers. In the United States, 25 patients successfully
received the VAD as part of the 178 implants planned for clinical
trials approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
 |
These
illustrations show a visual comparison
of the original ventricular assist device,
top, and the unit after modifications
by NASA researchers, center and bottom. Adding an inducer to the
MicroMed DeBakey VAD® eliminates
the dangerous back flow of blood by increasing
pressure and making flow more continuous.
The device is subjected to the highest
pressure around the blade tips, shown in magenta.
(Image courtesy NASA/Cetin Kiris) |
The device presents
several advantages for recipients. Weighing less than 4 ounces and measuring
1 inch by 3 inches, the MicroMed DeBakey VAD is approximately one-tenth
the size of other currently marketed pulsatile VADs. This makes it less
invasive and ideal for smaller adults and children. Because of the pump's
small size, less than 5 percent of the patients implanted developed device-related
infections, compared to an approximate 25-percent infection rate for larger
VADs. Additionally, MicroMed's VAD can operate up to 8 hours on batteries,
giving patients the mobility to do normal, everyday activities.
Currently,
over 160 patients have received the MicroMed
DeBakey VADwith
no incidence of pump failure. Having successfully
implanted the device lasting for periods over 1 year in individual
patients, MicroMed is planning to launch its DELTA ONETM study
to provide evidence of its VAD as a heart transplant alternativewhich
is also referred to as "destination therapy." MicroMed
is the first company to use a next-generation,
miniaturized device to conduct a clinical trial to address the use
of a VAD for long-term destination therapy. Upon FDA approval for
its investigational device exemption application, MicroMed will begin
its clinical study, which is projected to include 65 patients at up
to 20 U.S. sites. With new advances broadening the scope of the life-saving
VAD, which won the 2001 NASA Commercial Invention of the Year award,
thousands of individuals with heart problems stand to reap enormous
benefits.
The MicroMed
DeBakey VAD® is a registered trademark of MicroMed Technology,
Inc.
DELTA ONETM is a trademark of MicroMed Technology, Inc.
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