Gel injection could fix heart damage in a less invasive way

"Our hope is that this method of drug delivery to the heart will result in less invasive, less costly procedures with higher therapeutic efficacy," says Ke Cheng. "Our early results are promising—the method is safe and generates a higher retention rate of therapeutics than those currently in use." (Credit: Nick Fewings/Unsplash)

Injecting hydrogels containing stem cell or exosome therapeutics directly into the pericardial cavity could offer a less invasive, less costly, and more effective way to treat cardiac injury, according to new research.

Stem cell therapy holds promise as a way to treat cardiac injury, but delivering the therapy directly to the site of the injury and keeping it in place long enough to be effective presents ongoing challenges.

Even cardiac patches, which doctors can position directly over the site of the injury, have drawbacks in that they require invasive surgical methods for placement.

“We wanted a less invasive way to get therapeutics to the injury site,” says Ke Cheng, professor in regenerative medicine at the molecular biomedical sciences department at North Carolina State University and professor in the NC State/UNC-Chapel Hill joint department of biomedical engineering.

“Using the pericardial cavity as a natural ‘mold’ could allow us to create cardiac patches—at the site of injury—from hydrogels containing therapeutics.”

In a proof-of-concept study, Cheng and colleagues looked at two different types of hydrogels—one naturally derived and one synthetic—and two different stem cell-derived therapeutics in mouse and rat models of heart attack. The therapeutics were delivered via intrapericardial (iPC) injection.

Via fluorescent imaging the researchers saw that the hydrogel spread out to form a cardiac patch in the pericardial cavity. They also confirmed that the stem cell or exosome therapeutics can be released into the myocardium, leading to reduced cell death and improved cardiac function compared to animals in the group who received only the hydrogel without therapeutics.

The team then turned to a pig model to test the procedure’s safety and feasibility. They delivered the iPC injections using a minimally invasive procedure that required only two small incisions, then monitored the pigs for adverse effects. They found no breathing complications, pericardial inflammation, or changes in blood chemistry up to three days post-procedure.

“Our hope is that this method of drug delivery to the heart will result in less invasive, less costly procedures with higher therapeutic efficacy,” Cheng says. “Our early results are promising—the method is safe and generates a higher retention rate of therapeutics than those currently in use. Next we will perform additional preclinical studies in large animals to further test the safety and efficacy of this therapy, before we can start a clinical trial.”

“I anticipate in a clinical setting in the future, iPC injection could be performed with pericardial access similar to the LARIAT procedure. In that regard, only one small incision under local anesthesia is needed on the patient’s chest wall,” says coauthor Joe Rossi, associate professor in the division of cardiology at UNC-Chapel Hill.

The research appears in Nature Communications. The National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association funded the work.

Source: NC State