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Stent and leaflet stresses in a 26-mm first-generation balloon-expandable transcatheter aortic valve
Authors:Yue Xuan  Kapil Krishnan  Jian Ye  Danny Dvir  Julius M Guccione  Liang Ge  Elaine E Tseng
Institution:1. Department of Surgery, University of California San Francisco and San Francisco VA Medical Centers, San Francisco, Calif;2. Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, St Paul''s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;3. Division of Cardiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash
Abstract:

Objective

Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is established therapy for high-risk and inoperable patients with severe aortic stenosis, but questions remain regarding long-term durability. Valve design influences durability. Increased leaflet stresses in surgical bioprostheses have been correlated with degeneration; however, transcatheter valve leaflet stresses are unknown. From 2007 to 2014, a majority of US patients received first-generation balloon-expandable transcatheter valves. Our goal was to determine stent and leaflet stresses in this valve design using finite element analyses.

Methods

A 26-mm Sapien Transcatheter Heart Valve (Edwards Lifesciences, Inc, Irvine, Calif) underwent high-resolution microcomputed tomography scanning to develop precise 3-dimensional geometry of the leaflets, the stent, and the polyethylene terephthalate elements. The stent was modeled using 3-dimensional elements and the leaflets were modeled using shell elements. Stent material properties were based on stainless steel, whereas those for leaflets were obtained from surgical bioprostheses. Noncylindrical Sapien valve geometry was also simulated. Pressure loading to 80 mm Hg and 120 mm Hg was performed using ABAQUS finite element software (Dassault Systèmes, Waltham, Mass).

Results

At 80 mm Hg, maximum principal stresses on Sapien leaflets were 1.31 megaspascals (MPa). Peak leaflet stress was observed at commissural tips where leaflets connected to the stent. Maximum principal stresses for the stent were 188.91 MPa and located at stent tips where leaflet commissures were attached. Noncylindrical geometry increased peak principal leaflet stresses by 16%.

Conclusions

Using exact geometry from high-resolution scans, the 26-mm Sapien Transcatheter Heart Valve showed that peak stresses for both stent and leaflets were present at commissural tips where leaflets were attached. These regions would be prone to leaflet degeneration. Understanding stresses in first-generation transcatheter valves allows comparison to future designs for relative durability.
Keywords:transcatheter aortic valve  durability  stress  finite element  3D  3 dimensional  FEA  finite element analysis  FE  finite element  kPa  kilopascal  MPa  megapascal  Micro-CT  microcomputed tomography  PARTNER  Placement of Aortic Transcatheter Valves trial  TAV  transcatheter aortic valve  TAVR  transcatheter aortic valve replacement
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