The medical and technology teams at Bactiguard have, together with KTH, Sweden's largest technical university (Division of Micro and Nanosystems), and Karolinska Institute (Department of Clinical Neuroscience), performed a study on the impact of using Bactiguard's noble metal coating to reduce thrombo-inflammatory reactions and acute stent thrombosis. In short, the conclusion of the study is that when adding the Bactiguard's coating to implant materials, the body's reaction to foreign objects is significantly reduced. Any medical device that is inserted into the blood stream will cause a so called thrombo-inflammatory reaction.

This includes activation of the coagulation system, which potentially can result in a thrombosis. A stent is a metal net designed to open a blood vessel that is obstructed. Activation of the coagulation system and build-up of a thrombosis within a stent is a very serious complication that may lead to injury, or even to death.

The unique feature of Bactiguard's pure metal coating is that it reduces microbial adhesion on the surface of a medical device. Other studies have previously suggested that the coating also can reduce the thrombosis reaction. This specific study on the impact of usingBactiguard's coating To reduce thrombosis reactions and acute stent throbosis was performed to gather even more clinical data and proof points of the coating's efficacy.

For innovation and future application development purposes, two versions of the coating were applied to the stents in the study - Bactiguard's "standard" coating consisting of gold, silver and palladium, and a modified version including neodymium. The research methods used were both in vivo (in pigs) and in vitro (through blood marker analysis which also included human samples). The pigs underwent implantation of coated and non-coated stents in a blinded fashion, where the interventionist did not know which stents were coated and which were not.

The experiment was terminated after two hours, representing the acute phase of the implantation. The stents were placed in theual artery with one coated and one uncoated on each side. The volume of the stent was analyzed using CT-scans data and performed by a treatment blinded assessor.

The researchers also conducted laboratory tests using both human and pig blood. Note that the study obtained consent from all human participants involved. The measurements showed that the coated stent group had a notable decrease in blood clot volume compared to the control group.

This effect was observed as early as one hour after the stent was implanted and became even more concentrated after two hours. The in vitro data, using both human and pig blood, showed a significant decrease in markers of coagulation and inflammation in the coated group compared to the control group. The study was presented at the ISTH 2023 Congress in Montreal late June, a conference for healthcare professionals working in the fields of thrombosis and hemostasis.

The study titled "A novel noble metal stentcoating reduces in vitro platelet activation and acute in vivo thrombosis formation: a blinded study" is now published in Scientific Reports.