A Clinical‐Scale Microfluidic Respiratory Assist Device with 3D Branching Vascular Networks

Author:

Isenberg Brett C.1ORCID,Vedula Else M.1ORCID,Santos Jose1,Lewis Diana J.1ORCID,Roberts Teryn R.2ORCID,Harea George2ORCID,Sutherland David1,Landis Beau1,Blumenstiel Samuel1,Urban Joseph1,Lang Daniel1,Teece Bryan1,Lai WeiXuan1,Keating Rose1,Chiang Diana1,Batchinsky Andriy I.2ORCID,Borenstein Jeffrey T.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bioengineering Division Draper Cambridge MA 02139 USA

2. Autonomous Reanimation and Evacuation (AREVA) Research Program The Geneva Foundation San Antonio TX 78234 USA

Abstract

AbstractRecent global events such as COVID‐19 pandemic amid rising rates of chronic lung diseases highlight the need for safer, simpler, and more available treatments for respiratory failure, with increasing interest in extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). A key factor limiting use of this technology is the complexity of the blood circuit, resulting in clotting and bleeding and necessitating treatment in specialized care centers. Microfluidic oxygenators represent a promising potential solution, but have not reached the scale or performance required for comparison with conventional hollow fiber membrane oxygenators (HFMOs). Here the development and demonstration of the first microfluidic respiratory assist device at a clinical scale is reported, demonstrating efficient oxygen transfer at blood flow rates of 750 mL min⁻1, the highest ever reported for a microfluidic device. The central innovation of this technology is a fully 3D branching network of blood channels mimicking key features of the physiological microcirculation by avoiding anomalous blood flows that lead to thrombus formation and blood damage in conventional oxygenators. Low, stable blood pressure drop, low hemolysis, and consistent oxygen transfer, in 24‐hour pilot large animal experiments are demonstrated – a key step toward translation of this technology to the clinic for treatment of a range of lung diseases.

Funder

U.S. Army

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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