TY - JOUR
T1 - Cadaveric Feasibility of A 3D-Printed Vaso-Stent for Sutureless Anterior Interosseous Artery–Cephalic Vein Anastomosis
T2 - A Novel Approach to Arteriovenous Access Creation
AU - Saffari, Sara
AU - Ochoa, Esther
AU - Colchado, Daniel
AU - Liao, Amy
AU - Sacks, Justin M.
AU - Zayed, Mohamed
AU - Li, Xiaowei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) are the gold standard for vascular access to facilitate hemodialysis, yet traditional surgical techniques are technically demanding, time-intensive, and costly. Additionally, limited suitable AVF sites, due to patient anatomy, vessel quality, and prior access exhaustion, necessitate exploration of novel options. This cadaveric proof-of-concept study introduces the anterior interosseous artery-cephalic vein as a novel AVF site and evaluates the feasibility of a 3D-printed sutureless anastomotic device, the Vaso-Stent, compared to conventional handsewn techniques. Fresh-frozen cadaveric upper limbs were procured to test the surgical feasibility of the proposed AVF model. Surgical exposure of the interosseous artery and adjacent cephalic vein were uncomplicated. A 3D-printed Vaso-Stent was manufactured and facilitated efficient anastomosis in under 1 min, compared with the 4.5 min required for a standard handsewn technique. The device demonstrated ease of placement, robust structural integrity, and resistance to tensile forces. These findings highlight that the Vaso-Stent can provide a simple alternative for AVF creation that reduces operative time and highlight the anterior interosseous artery-cephalic vein configuration as a new and unique hemodialysis access opportunity.
AB - Arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) are the gold standard for vascular access to facilitate hemodialysis, yet traditional surgical techniques are technically demanding, time-intensive, and costly. Additionally, limited suitable AVF sites, due to patient anatomy, vessel quality, and prior access exhaustion, necessitate exploration of novel options. This cadaveric proof-of-concept study introduces the anterior interosseous artery-cephalic vein as a novel AVF site and evaluates the feasibility of a 3D-printed sutureless anastomotic device, the Vaso-Stent, compared to conventional handsewn techniques. Fresh-frozen cadaveric upper limbs were procured to test the surgical feasibility of the proposed AVF model. Surgical exposure of the interosseous artery and adjacent cephalic vein were uncomplicated. A 3D-printed Vaso-Stent was manufactured and facilitated efficient anastomosis in under 1 min, compared with the 4.5 min required for a standard handsewn technique. The device demonstrated ease of placement, robust structural integrity, and resistance to tensile forces. These findings highlight that the Vaso-Stent can provide a simple alternative for AVF creation that reduces operative time and highlight the anterior interosseous artery-cephalic vein configuration as a new and unique hemodialysis access opportunity.
KW - biomedical engineering
KW - general surgery
KW - vascular surgery
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105017475459
U2 - 10.1177/15533506251383671
DO - 10.1177/15533506251383671
M3 - Article
C2 - 41031535
AN - SCOPUS:105017475459
SN - 1553-3506
JO - Surgical Innovation
JF - Surgical Innovation
M1 - 15533506251383671
ER -