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Perfusion NewswireMain ZoneEffect of Biopassive and Bioactive Surface-Coatings on the Hemocompatibility of Membrane Oxygenators

Effect of Biopassive and Bioactive Surface-Coatings on the Hemocompatibility of Membrane Oxygenators

Background: Postoperative complications associated with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) surgery and extracorporeal circulation (ECC) procedures are still a major clinical issue. Improving the hemocompatibility of blood contacting devices used for ECC procedures may ameliorate various postpump syndromes.


Methods: In a simulated CPB model using human blood, we investigated the hemocompatibility, fibrinogen adsorption, and platelet receptor (GPIIb-IIIa) binding capacity of surface-modified membrane oxygenators (Jostra Quadrox). Three groups were compared: (i) biopassive protein coatings (SafeLine(R)), (ii) bioactive heparin coatings (BioLine(R)), and (iii) noncoated controls.


Results: During the 2 h recirculation period, plasma concentrations of activation markers for platelets (beta-thromboglobulin), inflammation (elastase), complement (C5a), and coagulation (prothrombin fragment 1+2, thrombin-antithrombin III) were lower in the groups with biopassive and bioactive coatings compared to the noncoated group (p < 0.01). These parameters did not significantly differ between the two surface-coated groups, except for complement activation: C5a levels were higher in the biopassive group compared to the bioactive group (p < 0.01). Moreover, surface-coated oxygenators showed less fibrinogen adsorption, GPIIb-IIIa binding, and platelet/leukocyte adhesion (p < 0.01). We assume that fewer fibrinogen and platelet receptor molecules bound to the surface-coated oxygenator surfaces results in fewer platelet adhesion and activation, which will significantly contribute to the improved hemocompatibility of the biopassive and bioactive oxygenators.


Conclusion: Our results suggest that the application of bioactive oxygenators (BioLine(R)) during CPB surgery may reduce postoperative complications for the patient more effectively than biopassive oxygenators (SafeLine(R)).


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