Publications
Evaluation of the Percutaneous Intramyocardial Injection for Local Myocardial Treatment
Rezaee M, Yeung AC, Altman P, Lubbe D, Takeshi S, Schwartz RS, Stertzer S, Altman JD
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Stanford University Hospital, Stanford, California
Therapeutic angiogenesis requires the induction of new blood vessel formation
for the treatment of peripheral vascular and coronary artery disease.
Efficacious application of this new therapy requires optimizing multiple
factors, including the therapeutic agent, dosing, frequency of administration,
and delivery modality. In this study, a helical needle drug infusion catheter
was applied for optimal application of percutaneous intramyocardial delivery
(PIMD). (125)Iodine-labeled albumin was injected by PIMD into the left ventricle
myocardium in eight swine. After 1 hr, PIMD resulted in a high concentration of
radiolabel at the treatment site; 16.4% +/- 2.1% of delivered and 81.4% +/- 2.6%
of the total cardiac activity was concentrated at the site of delivery. The
depth of needle penetration correlated with the myocardial retention of
delivered protein. The myocardial retention of radiolabel in animals with
shallow injections was 10.1% +/- 0.8%, compared to 18.9% +/- 3.3% retention
after deep injections. The specific activity at the treatment site (radioactive
counts per gram of tissue) was 115 +/- 36, 226 +/- 55, and 47 +/- 10 times
higher compared to liver, lung, and kidney, respectively. Continuous coronary
sinus and aortic blood sampling indicates that within 15 min following
intramyocardial injection, a significant amount of nonretained protein is found
within the coronary sinus. This study defines some of the parameters that can
affect optimal application of PIMD and demonstrates that PIMD is a safe and
efficient method for local drug delivery.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2001 Jun;53(2):271-6.