To main content

A new removable airway stent

Abstract

Background

Malignant airway obstruction is a feared complication and will most probably occur more frequently in the future because of increasing cancer incidence and increased life expectancy in cancer patients. Minimal invasive treatment using airway stents represents a meaningful and life-saving palliation. We present a new removable airway stent for improved individualised treatment.
Methods

To our knowledge, the new airway stent is the world's first knitted and uncovered self-expanding metal stent, which can unravel and be completely removed. In an in vivo model using two anaesthetised and spontaneously breathing pigs, we deployed and subsequently removed the stents by unravelling the device. The procedures were executed by flexible bronchoscopy in an acute and a chronic setting – a ‘proof-of-principle’ study.

Results

The new stent was easily and accurately deployed in the central airways, and it remained fixed in its original position. It was easy to unravel and completely remove from the airways without clinically significant complications. During the presence of the stent in the chronic study, granulation tissue was induced. This tissue disappeared spontaneously with the removal.


Conclusions

The new removable stent functioned according to its purpose and unravelled easily, and it was completely removed without significant technical or medical complications. Induced granulation tissue disappeared spontaneously. Further studies on animals and humans are needed to define its optimal indications and future use.
Read publication

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Tore Amundsen
  • Sveinung Sørhaug
  • Håkon Olav Leira
  • Stig Sverre Tyvold
  • Thomas Langø
  • Tommy Arild Hammer
  • Frode Manstad-Hulaas
  • Erney Mattsson

Affiliation

  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • St. Olavs Hospital, Trondheim University Hospital
  • Aleris AS
  • SINTEF Digital / Health Research

Year

2016

Published in

European Clinical Respiratory Journal

ISSN

2001-8525

Volume

3

Issue

1

View this publication at Cristin