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A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation

My thesis covers the clinical translation of a unique initiative at a South African tertiary institution towards a comprehensive, tailor-made African answer to a global health problem affecting millions of indigent patients outside the industrialized world. Rheumatic Heart Disease is typically a dis...

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Main Author: Scherman, Jacques
Other Authors: Zilla, Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Scherman, Jacques
author2 Zilla, Peter
author_browse Scherman, Jacques
Zilla, Peter
author_facet Zilla, Peter
Scherman, Jacques
author_sort Scherman, Jacques
collection Thesis
description My thesis covers the clinical translation of a unique initiative at a South African tertiary institution towards a comprehensive, tailor-made African answer to a global health problem affecting millions of indigent patients outside the industrialized world. Rheumatic Heart Disease is typically a disease of poverty, leading to different levels of destruction of patients' heart valves in an estimated 33 million patients of low- to middle income countries globally. Heart valve surgery is often the only life-saving remedy but seriously underprovided in developing countries. Moreover, replacement heart valve prostheses were developed for degenerative pathologies prevailing in high-income countries and poorly suited for the majority of patients suffering from rheumatic heart disease. As a clinician at the interface of the developing and developed world, I dedicated the first part of my thesis establishing the shortcomings of contemporary replacement heart valves in rheumatic patients. This included one of the rare follow-up studies in indigent patients confirming the need for a radically different concept. Providing the clinical end-goals to an engineering endeavor at the University of Cape Town to develop a replacement heart valve for rheumatic patients, the second part of my PhD focused on the in-vivo translation of this concept. In the absence of an established animal model for such a trans-catheter solution, the extensive implant series I performed achieved two goals: optimization of the devices in close interaction with the engineers and establishment of anatomical inclusion/exclusion criteria in both the sheep and pig model. Based on these accomplishments, I worked out an optimal implantation technique and demonstrated short and long-term performance of the developed heart valve devices in the animal models I established. Having successfully provided all the regulatory preclinical data required for ‘first-in-human' implants, I used a statistical analysis approach to extrapolate clinical and pre-clinical data towards size predictions for the replacement valves expected to be needed in an upcoming clinical trial while also defining anatomical exclusion criteria. I trust that this comprehensive clinical and laboratory-based PhD thesis that systematically progressed through the clinical translation process of a novel university-based development complies with the high standards defining the highest of postgraduate degrees.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41345 A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation Scherman, Jacques Zilla, Peter Rheumatic Heart Disease My thesis covers the clinical translation of a unique initiative at a South African tertiary institution towards a comprehensive, tailor-made African answer to a global health problem affecting millions of indigent patients outside the industrialized world. Rheumatic Heart Disease is typically a disease of poverty, leading to different levels of destruction of patients' heart valves in an estimated 33 million patients of low- to middle income countries globally. Heart valve surgery is often the only life-saving remedy but seriously underprovided in developing countries. Moreover, replacement heart valve prostheses were developed for degenerative pathologies prevailing in high-income countries and poorly suited for the majority of patients suffering from rheumatic heart disease. As a clinician at the interface of the developing and developed world, I dedicated the first part of my thesis establishing the shortcomings of contemporary replacement heart valves in rheumatic patients. This included one of the rare follow-up studies in indigent patients confirming the need for a radically different concept. Providing the clinical end-goals to an engineering endeavor at the University of Cape Town to develop a replacement heart valve for rheumatic patients, the second part of my PhD focused on the in-vivo translation of this concept. In the absence of an established animal model for such a trans-catheter solution, the extensive implant series I performed achieved two goals: optimization of the devices in close interaction with the engineers and establishment of anatomical inclusion/exclusion criteria in both the sheep and pig model. Based on these accomplishments, I worked out an optimal implantation technique and demonstrated short and long-term performance of the developed heart valve devices in the animal models I established. Having successfully provided all the regulatory preclinical data required for ‘first-in-human' implants, I used a statistical analysis approach to extrapolate clinical and pre-clinical data towards size predictions for the replacement valves expected to be needed in an upcoming clinical trial while also defining anatomical exclusion criteria. I trust that this comprehensive clinical and laboratory-based PhD thesis that systematically progressed through the clinical translation process of a novel university-based development complies with the high standards defining the highest of postgraduate degrees. 2025-04-03T12:43:16Z 2025-04-03T12:43:16Z 2024 2025-04-01T10:27:21Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41345 eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape town
spellingShingle Rheumatic Heart Disease
Scherman, Jacques
A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation
title_full A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation
title_fullStr A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation
title_full_unstemmed A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation
title_short A novel trans-catheter heart valve system for low- to middle-income countries: need assessment, surgical feasibility and preclinical translation
title_sort novel trans catheter heart valve system for low to middle income countries need assessment surgical feasibility and preclinical translation
topic Rheumatic Heart Disease
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41345
work_keys_str_mv AT schermanjacques anoveltranscatheterheartvalvesystemforlowtomiddleincomecountriesneedassessmentsurgicalfeasibilityandpreclinicaltranslation
AT schermanjacques noveltranscatheterheartvalvesystemforlowtomiddleincomecountriesneedassessmentsurgicalfeasibilityandpreclinicaltranslation