Title: The Science Behind Taxus
1The Science Behind Taxus
- Advanced Angioplasty 2004
Christian Vander Velde, Boston Scientific Europe,
Marketing
2TAXUS Technology
Polymer
Paclitaxel
Platform
- Express Stent
- Tandem Architecture
- Flexibility
- Maverick Balloon
- Deliverability
- Binds tubulin
- Microtubular dynamics
- Multifunctional
- Uniformity
- Durability
- Biphasic Controlled Release Kinetics
3TAXUS Technology - Paclitaxel
Table adapted from the experimental models by
Ferns et al.
4TAXUS Technology - Paclitaxel
Paclitaxel selectively impacts smooth muscle
cells, platelets, and white blood cell activity
without affecting endothelial cells
- Paclitaxel is a multi-functional drug which
effectively - Inhibits proliferation
- Inhibits migration
- Inhibits inflammation
- Inhibits secretion
Restenosis
Prevents
- Paclitaxel enables healing by selectively
impacting the cells that cause restenosis while
allowing healthy healing of endothelial cells - TAXUS shows similar healing between control bare
metal stent and paclitaxel
Endothelialization
Promotes
Axel et al, AHA 1997, Karsch et al, SIC 1998
Endothelialization of a paclitaxel-eluting stent
in a porcine coronary artery
5Polymer Carrier Considerations Chemical/Physical
and Biological
Biocompatible
Formulate/ process
Coating Integrity
Sterilization
Drug Loading Drug release
Vascular compatible
6Coating Integrity BSC Carrier- TransluteTM
Coated, Loaded, Sterilized, Expanded
40x
200x
- Smooth, Uniform Coverage
- No Cracking, Flaking or Delaminating
7Uniform PTx Content Along Stents of Different
Lengths
(15, 24, 32 mm stents -- 1ug/mm2)
8Uniform PTx Release From ExpressTM Stents of
Different Lengths
1.0 ug/mm2, Slow release 16 mm
1.0 ug/mm2, Slow Release 24 mm
1.0 ug/mm2, Slow Release 32 mm
9Polymer-based Clinical Data
- TRIAL DOSE OF PTx LATE LOSS mm
- TAXUS I 1.0ug/mm2 SR
0.36 /- 0.48 - TAXUS II 1.0ug/mm2 SR
0.31 /- 0.39 - TAXUS II 1.0ug/mm2 MR
0.30 /- 0.39 - TAXUS IV 1.0ug/mm2 SR 0.39 /-
0.50 - Confirmed by IVUS analysis (TAXUS II -
Circulation January 20, 2004)
10In Vivo Considerations for Polymers and Drugs
- Animal Model
- Rat
- Rabbit
- Swine
- Canine
- Implant Time
- Implant Location
- Sub Q
- IM
- Iliac
- Coronary
- Other
11Polymer CarriersVascular Compatibility
Failed candidates (normal porcine coronary model)
Polyurethane-coated Stent (2 months)
Bare Stent
Sub-optimal drug carriers can cause severe
inflammatory response
In Collaboration w/Drs. Rogers and Edelman,MIT
12Effect of Animal Model and Implant SiteRat
Subcutaneous Implant Model
28 day Implant - HE Staining
Polyurethane-coated Stent
Bare Stent
13Effect of Animal Model and Implant Site
Porcine Coronary 28 day
Bare Stent
Polyurethane-coated Stent
In Collaboration w/Drs. Rogers and Edelman,MIT
14Effect of Animal Model and Implant Site
Rabbit Iliac Artery
28 day PLA/PCL coated stent
56 day PLA/PCL coated stent
In Collaboration w/Drs. Rogers and Edelman, MIT
15Effect of Animal Model and Implant Site
Porcine Coronary Artery
35 day PLA/PCL
In Collaboration w/Drs. Rogers and Edelman, MIT
16Vascular CompatibilityTransluteTM
180D Bare control
90D Bare control
90D polymer coated
180D polymer coated
In collaboration with Dr. Rob Schwartz Mayo
Clinic and Dr. Greg Wilson Sick
Childrens-Toronto
17Translute Polymer Long term (180 days) vascular
compatibility
180 day
- Good safety profile
- Polymer similar to control
- Reproduced from lot to lot
Translute only Express stent
In collaboration with Dr. Rob Schwartz Mayo
Clinic and Dr. Greg Wilson Sick
Childrens-Toronto
18Vascular Compatibility TransluteTM
Endothelial coverage (PECAM 1, 0-5)
Luminal Stenosis
Inflammation (CD45, 0-4)
No significant differences
In Collaboration w/Drs. Rogers and Edelman,MIT
19TAXUS Technology - Translute Polymer
- Polymer-based matrices provide
- ease of handling
- uniform dose along stent and dosing in a
controlled manner consistency - a matrix by which drug release can be manipulated
to achieve a desired biological response
With greater opportunities come greater challenges
20TransluteTM Polymer stability
- TransluteTM coating integrity was maintained in
10-year equivalency tests - The TransluteTM polymer has shown remarkable
stability out to two years in an animal model - Harsh conditions (alcohol storage, mild heat,
agitation) fail to degrade the polymer - Tests have shown that following physical abrasion
of the polymer, the release is not markedly
increased
data on file
21Thank You !