PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Maitz, Manfred F AU - Kaiser, Daniel P O AU - Cuberi, Ani AU - Weich Hernández, Rafaela AU - Mühl-Benninghaus, Ruben AU - Tomori, Toshiki AU - Gawlitza, Matthias TI - Enhancing thromboresistance of neurovascular nickel-titanium devices with responsive heparin hydrogel coatings AID - 10.1136/jnis-2024-021836 DP - 2024 May 17 TA - Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery PG - jnis-2024-021836 4099 - http://jnis.bmj.com/content/early/2024/05/17/jnis-2024-021836.short 4100 - http://jnis.bmj.com/content/early/2024/05/17/jnis-2024-021836.full AB - Background Neurointerventional devices, particularly laser-cut thin-strut stents made of self-expanding nickel-titanium alloy, are increasingly utilized for endovascular applications in intracranial arteries and dural venous sinuses. Preventing thrombosis and stroke necessitates systemic anticoagulant and antiplatelet therapies with the risk of bleeding complications. Antithrombotic coatings present a promising solution.Methods In this study, we investigated the potential of hydrogels composed of four-armed poly(ethylene glycol) (starPEG) and heparin, with or without coagulation-responsive heparin release, as coatings for neurovascular devices to mitigate blood clot formation. We evaluated the feasibility and efficacy of these coatings on neurovascular devices through in vitro Chandler-Loop assays and implantation experiments in the supra-aortic arteries of rabbits.Results Stable and coagulation-responsive starPEG-heparin hydrogel coatings exhibited antithrombotic efficacy in vitro, although with a slightly reduced thromboprotection observed in vivo. Furthermore, the hydrogel coatings demonstrated robustness against shear forces encountered during deployment and elicited only marginal humoral and cellular inflammatory responses compared with the reference standards.Conclusion Heparin hydrogel coatings offer promising benefits for enhancing the hemocompatibility of neurointerventional devices made of self-expanding nickel-titanium alloy. The variance in performance between in vitro and in vivo settings may be attributed to differences in low- and high-shear blood flow conditions inherent to these models. These models may represent the differences in venous and arterial systems. Further optimization is warranted to tailor the hydrogel coatings for improved efficacy in arterial applications.Data are available in a public, open access repository. Data from this study can be acquired from Zenodo doi: 10.5281/zenodo.11005533.