A wireless, implantable bioelectronic system for monitoring urinary bladder function following surgical recovery

Partial cystectomy procedures for urinary bladder-related dysfunction involve long recovery periods, during which urodynamic studies (UDS) intermittently assess lower urinary tract function. However, UDS are not patient-friendly, they exhibit user-to-user variability, and they amount to snapshots in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2024-04, Vol.121 (14), p.e2400868121
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Jihye, Bury, Matthew I, Kwon, Kyeongha, Yoo, Jae-Young, Halstead, Nadia V, Shin, Hee-Sup, Li, Shupeng, Won, Sang Min, Seo, Min-Ho, Wu, Yunyun, Park, Do Yun, Kini, Mitali, Kwak, Jean Won, Madhvapathy, Surabhi R, Ciatti, Joanna L, Lee, Jae Hee, Kim, Suyeon, Ryu, Hanjun, Yamagishi, Kento, Yoon, Hong-Joon, Kwak, Sung Soo, Kim, Bosung, Huang, Yonggang, Halliday, Lisa C, Cheng, Earl Y, Ameer, Guillermo A, Sharma, Arun K, Rogers, John A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Partial cystectomy procedures for urinary bladder-related dysfunction involve long recovery periods, during which urodynamic studies (UDS) intermittently assess lower urinary tract function. However, UDS are not patient-friendly, they exhibit user-to-user variability, and they amount to snapshots in time, limiting the ability to collect continuous, longitudinal data. These procedures also pose the risk of catheter-associated urinary tract infections, which can progress to ascending pyelonephritis due to prolonged lower tract manipulation in high-risk patients. Here, we introduce a fully bladder-implantable platform that allows for continuous, real-time measurements of changes in mechanical strain associated with bladder filling and emptying via wireless telemetry, including a wireless bioresorbable strain gauge validated in a benchtop partial cystectomy model. We demonstrate that this system can reproducibly measure real-time changes in a rodent model up to 30 d postimplantation with minimal foreign body response. Studies in a nonhuman primate partial cystectomy model demonstrate concordance of pressure measurements up to 8 wk compared with traditional UDS. These results suggest that our system can be used as a suitable alternative to UDS for long-term postoperative bladder recovery monitoring.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2400868121