Patent Document

FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
       [0001]    This invention relates generally to the fields of medical treatment devices and methods of use. In particular, the invention relates to devices and methods for irradiating tissue surrounding a body cavity, such as a site from which cancerous, pre-cancerous, or other tissue has been removed. 
       BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
       [0002]    In diagnosing and treating certain medical conditions, it is often desirable to perform a biopsy, in which a specimen or sample of tissue is removed for pathological examination, tests and analysis. A biopsy typically results in a biopsy cavity occupying the space formerly occupied by the tissue that was removed. As is known, obtaining a tissue sample by biopsy and the subsequent examination are typically employed in the diagnosis of cancers and other malignant tumors, or to confirm that a suspected lesion or tumor is not malignant. Treatment of cancers identified by biopsy may include subsequent removal of tissue surrounding the biopsy site, leaving an enlarged cavity in the patient&#39;s body. Cancerous tissue is often treated by application of radiation, by chemotherapy, or by thermal treatment (e.g., local heating, cryogenic therapy, and other treatments to heat, cool, or freeze tissue). 
         [0003]    Cancer treatment may be directed to a natural cavity, or to a cavity in a patient&#39;s body from which tissue has been removed, typically following removal of cancerous tissue during a biopsy or surgical procedure. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,923,754 to Lubock and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/849,410 to Lubock, the disclosures of which are all hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties, describe devices for implantation into a cavity resulting from the removal of cancerous tissue which can be used to deliver radiation to surrounding tissue. One form of radiation treatment used to treat cancer near a body cavity remaining following removal of tissue is “brachytherapy” in which a source of radiation is placed near to the site to be treated. 
         [0004]    Lubock above describes implantable devices for treating tissue surrounding a cavity left by surgical removal of cancerous or other tissue that includes an inflatable balloon constructed for placement in the cavity. Such devices may be used to apply one or more of radiation therapy, chemotherapy, and thermal therapy to the tissue surrounding the cavity from which the tissue was removed. The delivery lumen of the device may receive a solid or a liquid radiation source. Radiation treatment is applied to tissue adjacent the balloon of the device by placing radioactive material such as radioactive “seeds” in a delivery lumen. Such treatments may be repeated if desired. 
         [0005]    For example, a “MammoSite® Radiation Therapy System” (MammoSite® RTS, Proxima Therapeutics, Inc., Alpharetta, Ga. 30005 USA) includes a balloon catheter with a radiation source or configured to receive a radiation source that can be placed within a tumor resection cavity in a breast after a lumpectomy. It can deliver a prescribed dose of radiation from inside the tumor resection cavity to the tissue surrounding the original tumor. The radiation source is typically a solid radiation source; however, a liquid radiation source may also be used with a balloon catheter placed within a body cavity (e.g., Iotrex®, Proxima Therapeutics, Inc.). A radiation source such as a miniature or microminiature x-ray tube catheter may also be used (e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 6,319,188). The x-ray tube catheters are small, flexible and are believed to be maneuverable enough to reach the desired treatment location within a patient&#39;s body. The radiation source may be removed following each treatment session, or may remain in place as long as the balloon remains within the body cavity. Inflatable treatment delivery devices and systems, such as the MammoSite® RTS and similar devices and systems (e.g., GliaSite® RTS (Proxima Therapeutics, Inc.)), are useful to treat cancer in tissue adjacent a body cavity. 
         [0006]    Tissue cavities resulting from biopsy or other surgical procedures such as lumpectomy typically are not always uniform or regular in their sizes and shapes, so that radiation treatment often result in differences in dosages applied to different regions of surrounding tissue, including “hot spots” and regions of relatively low dosage. However, by conforming the tissue lining the cavity about an inflated member, such as a balloon, a more uniform or controlled radiation can be applied to the tissue. 
         [0007]    However, making a robust, inflatable balloon which has a predictable inflated size and shape can be problematic, particularly with a balloon size suitable for breast biopsy/lumpectomy cavities which range from about 0.5 to about 4 inches in maximum diameter, and are typically about 2 inches. 
       SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
       [0008]    This invention is generally directed to irradiating tissue surrounding a patient&#39;s body cavity, and particularly to devices and methods for such treatments. The invention is particularly suitable for treating tissue adjacent a patient&#39;s body cavity formed by removal of tissue for a biopsy or lumpectomy. 
         [0009]    More specifically, a device embodying features of the invention includes an elongated shaft with a treatment location at a distal portion of the shaft which is configured to receive or which includes a radiation source and an inflatable cavity filling member or balloon surrounding the treatment location on the distal shaft portion having two or more layers of compliant or semi-compliant polymeric materials. In this embodiment, the polymeric material of one or more of the multiple layers of the inflatable balloon in a formed but un-inflated condition has limited expansion to a turgid inflated condition with the balloon material at or near the material&#39;s elastic limit. The balloon&#39;s volumetric expansion from an initial formed condition to an inflated turgid condition should be less than 200%, preferably less than 175% and should be more than 25%. Typically, the expansion should be about 50% to about 150%. The residual stress in the formed polymeric material of the one or more layers of the balloon should be the result of an expansion of the external surface area of a balloon to the surface area of the balloon in the initial formed condition. This expansion can be represented by the ratio of the external surface area of the initially formed condition of the balloon to the to-be-expanded external surface area of the balloon preform represented as a percentage of the to-be-expanded surface area of the balloon preform. This ratio should be not more than 1000%, preferably less than 800% from a pre-form such as a tube. Preferably, the pre-form is an extruded product. The process of expansion may involve heating the preform and the level of residual stress in the balloon material at the initial formed condition may be dependent on the temperature of the preform during the expansion and the time dependant profile of the heating and cooling cycle of the material during expansion. 
         [0010]    The multiple layers of the inflatable cavity filling member should be formed of a thermoplastic elastomeric polymer such as polyester polyurethane, e.g. Pellethane™ which is available from Dow Chemical. Preferably the polymeric material has a Shore Durometer of 90 A. Other suitable polymeric materials may be employed. The polymeric material of the balloon layers may be a blend of polymers or a copolymer. 
         [0011]    Balloons of this type are often filled with a radiopaque fluid for visualization for positional and symmetry verification and CT for positional verification and radiation dose planning. The balloons themselves may be radiopaque by compounding radiopaque agents into the balloon material, coating the inside and/or outside surfaces of a balloon layer with radiopaque material or providing a radiopaque material between balloon layers. Radiopaque agents or materials may be one or more metals of the group consisting of tantalum, tungsten, rhenium, titanium and alloys thereof or compounds containing oxides of titanium or barium salts such as those which are often used as pigments. 
         [0012]    A radiation catheter device embodying features of the invention preferably has an inflatable cavity filling member or balloon at the treatment location which is configured to at least in part fill the body cavity to be treated. The device also may include an inner lumen configured to be in fluid communication with a proximal vacuum source and one or more vacuum ports preferably proximal and/or distal to the cavity filling member such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,923,754 and co-pending application Ser. No. 10/849,410, filed on May 19, 2004, both of which are assigned to the present assignee. Application of a vacuum within the inner lumen aspirates fluid in the cavity through the one or more vacuum ports and the application of a vacuum within the body cavity pulls tissue defining the cavity onto the exterior of the inflated cavity filling member deployed within the cavity so as to conform the tissue lining to the shape of the cavity filling member. 
         [0013]    Methods previously described in co-pending applications Ser. No. 11/357,274, filed on Feb. 17, 2006 and Ser. No. 11/593,789, filed on Nov. 6, 2006 for using radiation catheters are suitable for a radiation catheter embodying features of the invention body cavity. The present invention however, provides enhanced control over the expansion of the balloon and a more predictable ultimate balloon size and shape. These and other advantages of the present invention are described in more detail in the following detailed description and the accompanying exemplary drawings. 
     
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
         [0014]      FIG. 1  is a perspective view of a catheter device embodying features of the invention including a multilayered balloon. 
           [0015]      FIG. 2  is a transverse cross section of the catheter shaft taken along the lines  2 - 2  shown in  FIG. 1 . 
           [0016]      FIG. 3  is an enlarged transverse cross sectional view of the multilayered balloon wall shown in  FIG. 2 . 
           [0017]      FIG. 4  is an enlarged sectional view of the balloon wall shown in the circle  3 - 3  in  FIG. 3  to illustrate the multiple layers thereof. 
           [0018]      FIG. 5  is an enlarged longitudinal cross-section of a radiation tube taken along the lines  5 - 5  shown in  FIG. 1  to illustrate the deployment of a radiation source within the treatment location. 
       
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION  
       [0019]    The present invention provides devices and methods for treatment of a patient&#39;s body cavity. For example, devices and methods having features of the invention are used to deliver radiation or other treatment into a biopsy site or into a cavity left after removal of cancerous tissue from the patient&#39;s body. 
         [0020]      FIGS. 1-5  illustrate a catheter device  10  which has an elongated shaft  11 , a cavity filling member or balloon  12  on the distal portion of the shaft which for the most part defines the treatment location, and an adapter  13  on the proximal end of shaft  11 . A plurality of tubes  14 - 18  extend into the adapter  13  and are in fluid communication with lumens  20 - 24  respectively within the shaft  11  which are configured to receive one or more radiation sources  25 . The device  10  also has an inflation tube  26  which is in fluid communication with inflation lumen  27  that extends to and is in fluid communication with the interior of the balloon  12  to facilitate delivery of inflation fluid thereto. The inflation fluid may be radiopaque to facilitate imaging of the balloon and shaft within the patient. The lumen  27  is shown filled with radiopaque fluid in  FIG. 1 . The adapter  13  also has a vacuum tube  28  that is in fluid communication with lumens  30  and  31 . Lumen  30  is in fluid communication with proximal vacuum port  32  and lumen  31  is in fluid communication with tubular member  33  which extends across the interior of balloon  12  and which in turn is in fluid communication with distal vacuum port  34 . Radiation delivery tubes  35 - 39  extend through the interior of balloon  12  and are in fluid communication with lumens  20 - 24  within shaft  11 . The radiation delivery tubes  35 ,  36 ,  38  and  39  extend radially away from a center line axis  40  within the interior of balloon  12  in order to position a radiation source  25  closer to a first tissue portion surrounding a body cavity than a second tissue portion. While tubes  35 ,  36 ,  38  and  39  are shown as being slightly radially extended within the interior of balloon  12 , less than all of them may radially extend within the balloon  12  depending upon the need for a particular treatment. Moreover, tubes  35 ,  36 ,  38  and  39  may be in a contracted state within recesses of support member  41 , and one or more of the tubes may be radially extended out of the recesses after the balloon  12  is deployed within a cavity at the target body site. 
         [0021]    The support element  41 , which extends between the proximal and distal ends of the balloon  12 , has four compartments  42 - 4  which are designed to receive tubular radiation delivery members  35 ,  36 ,  38  and  39  respectively. The radiation delivery tubes will not usually be radially extended to the extent that they contact the interior surface of the balloon  12  in an inflated condition. 
         [0022]    The balloon  12  is provided with two separate layers  50  and  51  as shown in  FIG. 3 . The expansion of the balloon  12  is illustrated in  FIG. 2  with the balloon in an as formed, non-turgid condition shown in phantom. The arrow  52  illustrates the expansion of the balloon from the formed condition to the turgid condition. The volumetric expansion is less than 200% of the initial formed volume (diameter shown as arrow  53 ), preferably less than 175% and is typically about 75 to about 125% of the initial balloon volume. While the inflated, turgid balloon  12  is shown as being spherical in shape, other shapes may be suitable, such as an ovoid shape. Depending upon the material and the conditions at the body site, the wall of the turgid balloon may relax somewhat after reaching the turgid condition. The thicknesses of the balloon wall layers can vary depending upon the material characteristics and the number of layers. Typically, the thickness of individual balloon wall layers range from about 0.0003 to about 0.006 inch, preferably about 0.001 to about 0.002 inch. The total thickness of the balloon wall is about 0.0006 to about 0.012 inch, preferably about 0.002 to about 0.004 inch. 
         [0023]    The radiation delivery tubes  14 - 18 , which extend into the adapter  13 , may extend through the lumens  20 - 24  in shaft  11  and may form tubes  35 - 39  which are received by the support member  40  and extend into the interior of balloon  12 . 
         [0024]    All of the radiation delivery tubes which extend through the interior of the balloon  12  would not necessarily be used in a particular irradiation procedure, but they would be available for use by the physician if needed, e.g. when the balloon  12  of the radiation catheter  10  is not in a desired position and rotation of the catheter is not appropriate or desirable. The shaft  11  is shown as a solid shaft having a plurality of passageways. However, the shaft  11  may be made more flexible by utilizing a plurality of elongated tubes  14 - 18  which are bundled together to form the shaft. Multiple bands may encircle the tubular members along their length to hold the tubular members together. 
         [0025]    The radiation source  25  for the brachytherapy device  10  is shown as a radiation seed on the distal end of rod  41 . However, the radiation source  25  may be a solid or liquid radiation source. Suitable liquid radiation sources include, for example, a liquid containing a radioactive iodine isotope (e.g., I 125  or I 131 ), a slurry of a solid isotope, for example,  198 Au or  169 Yb, or a gel containing a radioactive isotope. Liquid radiation sources are commercially available (e.g., Iotrex®, Proxima Therapeutics, Inc., Alpharetta, Ga.). The radiation source  25  preferably includes brachytherapy seeds or other solid radiation sources used in radiation therapy. A catheter with a micro-miniature x-ray source may also be utilized. The radiation source  25  may be either preloaded into the device  10  at the time of manufacture or may be loaded into the device  10  before or after placement into a body cavity or other site of a patient. Solid radionuclides suitable for use with a device  10  embodying features of the present invention are currently generally available as brachytherapy radiation sources (e.g., I-Plant.™ Med-Tec, Orange City, Iowa.). Radiation may also be delivered by a micro-miniature x-ray device such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,319,188. The x-ray tubes are small, flexible and are believed to be maneuverable enough to reach the desired location within a patient&#39;s body. 
         [0026]    The radiation source  18  of the device  10  can include a radiation source which is solid or liquid or both, e.g. a slurry. Suitable liquid radiation sources include, for example, a liquid containing a radioactive iodine isotope (e.g., I 125  or I 131 ), a slurry of a solid isotope, for example,  198 AU or  169 Yb, or a gel containing a radioactive isotope. Liquid radiation sources are commercially available (e.g., Iotrex®, Proxima Therapeutics, Inc., Alpharetta, Ga.). The radiation source  18  preferably is one or more brachytherapy seeds, for example, a radioactive microsphere available from 3M Company of St. Paul, Minn. Other suitable brachytherapy radiation sources include I-Plant™, (Med-Tec, Orange City, Iowa.). Radiation may also be delivered by a microminiature x-ray tube catheter such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,319,188. X-ray tube catheters are small, flexible and are believed to be maneuverable enough to reach the desired location within a patient&#39;s body. 
         [0027]    The device  10  can be provided, at least in part, with a lubricious coating, such as a hydrophilic material. The lubricious coating preferably is applied to the elongate shaft  11  or to the balloon  12  or both, to reduce sticking and friction during insertion and withdrawal of the device  10 . Hydrophilic coatings such as those provided by AST, Surmodics, TUA Systems, Hydromer, or STS Biopolymers are suitable. The surfaces of the device  10  may also include an antimicrobial coating that covers all or a portion of the device  10  to minimize the risk of introducing of an infection during extended treatments. The antimicrobial coating preferably is comprised of silver ions impregnated into a hydrophilic carrier. Alternatively the silver ions are implanted onto the surface of the device  10  by ion beam deposition. The antimicrobial coating may also be an antiseptic or disinfectant such as chlorhexadiene, benzyl chloride or other suitable biocompatible antimicrobial materials impregnated into hydrophilic coatings. Antimicrobial coatings such as those provided by Spire, AST, Algon, Surfacine, Ion Fusion, or Bacterin International would be suitable. Alternatively a cuff member covered with the antimicrobial coating may be provided on the elongated shaft of the delivery device  10  at the point where the device  10  enters the patient&#39;s skin. 
         [0028]    The balloon  11  may also be provided with radiopaque material to facilitate detection during CT, X-ray or fluoroscopic imaging. Such imaging allows the physician or other staff to detect the size and shape of the balloon and whether the balloon is properly located at the desired location. Preferably, the exterior surface of an inner layer of the balloon is coated at least in part with radiopaque material. One suitable method for coating the surface of the layer is to mix a polymer, preferably essentially the same polymer of the layer, with a solvent such as tetrahydrofuran and a radiopaque agent such as a powdered metallic material, e.g. titanium, gold, platinum and the like, or other suitable radiopaque materials. The mixture is applied to the exterior surface of an inner balloon layer and the solvent is allowed to evaporate, leaving the radiopaque material and the polymer bonded to the balloon layer. The multiple layers of the balloon are then secured to the catheter shaft. 
         [0029]    The device  10  may be used to treat a body cavity of a patient, e.g. a biopsy or lumpectomy site within a patient&#39;s breast, in the manner described in the previously referred to co-pending applications. Usually the adapter  13  on the proximal end of the catheter device extends out of the patient during the procedure when the balloon is inflated. The catheter shaft  11  is preferably flexible enough along a length thereof, so that once the balloon is inflated to its turgid condition, the catheter shaft can be folded or coiled and placed under the patient&#39;s skin before the exterior opening of the treatment passageway to the treatment site is closed. At the end of the treatment time, e.g. 5-10 days, the exterior opening can be reopened and the catheter removed from the patient. See for example the discussion thereof in previously discussed co-pending application Ser. No. 11/357,274. 
         [0030]    Radiation balloon catheters for breast implantation generally are about 6 to about 12 inches (15.2-30.5 cm) in length, typically about 10.6 inch (27 cm). The shaft diameter is about 0.1 to about 0.5 inch (2.5-12.7 mm), preferably about 0.2 to about 0.4 inch (5.1-10.2 mm), typically 0.32 inch (8 mm). The individual radiation lumens are about 0.02 to about 0.15 inch (0.5-3.8 mm), preferably about 0.04 to about 0.1 inch (1-1.5 mm). The balloons are designed for inflated configurations about 0.5 to about 4 inches (1.3-10.2 cm), typically about 1 to about 3 inches (2.5-7.5 cm) in transverse dimensions, e.g. diameters. 
         [0031]    While particular forms of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, it will be apparent that various modifications and improvements can be made to the invention. To the extent not previously described, the various elements of the catheter device may be made from conventional materials used in similar devices. Moreover, individual features of embodiments of the invention may be shown in some drawings and not in others, but those skilled in the art will recognize that individual features of one embodiment of the invention can be combined with any or all the features of another embodiment. Accordingly, it is not intended that the invention be limited to the specific embodiments illustrated. It is therefore intended that this invention be defined by the scope of the appended claims as broadly as the prior art will permit. 
         [0032]    Terms such as “element”, “member”, “component”, “device”, “means”, “manufacture”, “portion”, “section”, “steps” and words of similar import when used herein shall not be construed as invoking the provisions of 35 U.S.C. §112(6) unless the following claims expressly use the terms “means for” or “step for” followed by a particular function without reference to a specific structure or action. All patents and all patent applications referred to above are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.

Technology Category: 1