SBIR-STTR Award

Novel Outside-In Dialyzer with Long Filter Life and Reduced Anticoagulation Therapies
Award last edited on: 9/21/2022

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIDDK
Total Award Amount
$1,999,998
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
847
Principal Investigator
Mohamed E Labib

Company Information

Novaflux Technologies Inc (AKA: Novaflux Inc~Princeton Trade & Technology, Inc.~Novaflux Bio Sciences, Inc)

1 Wall Street
Princeton, NJ 08540
   (609) 683-0215
   info@novaflux.com
   www.novaflux.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 12
County: Mercer

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R44DK125230-01A1
Start Date: 9/15/2020    Completed: 8/31/2022
Phase I year
2020
Phase I Amount
$999,999
[Revised] For the past 60 years all hollow fiber dialyzers have had intraluminal blood flow. Novaflux outside-in filtration (OIF) creates a new design paradigm for hollow fiber dialyzers, changing dialyzer flow distribution so that blood flows on the outside of the fiber and dialysate flows in the intraluminal space. This development reduces the need for anticoagulation for acute or chronic dialytic therapies, including hemodialysis (HD) and provides increased filter life for continuous renal replacement therapies (CRRT). In vitro data using conventional dialyzers with OIF flow have found increased filter life to over 100 hours as compared to ~24 h with standard flow with statistically equivalent clearance. In OIF, thrombi have a minimal effect on the blood flow or filter pressure, diffusive clearance, or filtrate flux due to dynamic three-dimensional interconnected flow channels created in the inter fiber space. Novaflux research has developed prototype fibers that reverse the conventional dialyzer membrane structure to provide a thin tight smooth hemocompatible outer skin. The OI fiber will prevent damage to blood cells or formation of platelet aggregates. Novaflux OI filter housings optimize the blood inlet design using novel flow geometries, modeling and computation flow dynamics to provide steady blood velocity and uniform blood flow distribution. OIF dialyzers will be able to be produced by current dialyzer production equipment with relatively minor modifications. The value proposition of OI dialyzers is to reduce or eliminate the need for anticoagulation for chronic hemodialysis. This brings about key benefits including: 1) Lowering risk of heparin related complications such as bleeding and blood loss post treatment; 2) Providing a no-anticoagulation alternative for Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia; 3) Lowering the cost by $0.70 to $1.60 per treatment due to reduction in the use of heparin; 4) Reduction of microemboli which may pass from the extracorporeal circuit to the patient, causing ischemic lesions in organs such as the brain, which may contribute to dialysis dementia; and 5) Lower clotting potential facilitates development of wearable renal treatments. The OI filter can help acute dialytic renal treatments by providing no or reduced anticoagulation and longer filter life in CRRT, which translates into: 1) Lower cost and complexity for the healthcare provider; and 2) Reduced need for complex anticoagulation regimes, e.g., regional citrate anticoagulation. The Phase II will scale up the OIF membrane and housings to produce prototype OI dialyzers for in vitro and animal studies to characterize performance and hemocompatibility. These studies will quantify the potential of OI technology to eliminate or reduce anticoagulation for dialytic therapies and to provide clinical benefits and cost reductions compared to current acute and chronic therapies. The Specific Aims of this two year program are: Aim 1: Development of pilot scale production of OI fiber; Aim 2: Design the housing for the outside-in filter based on CFD analysis and develop the dialyzer manufacturing/construction process for limited production runs; Aim 3: To perform Ex vivo testing for the OI membrane and OI filter; and Aim 4: To perform in vivo animal testing in the sheep model. The OI technology will also enable the development of wearable technologies due to inherent benefits of longer filter life.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
8. Project Narrative This project is to develop a prototype outside-in (OI) dialysis filter that have shown in preliminary studies to achieve >100 hours filter life without clogging or increase in filter pressure gradient. An asymmetric OI hollow fiber (membrane layer at the outside surface) based on the FDA approved polyethersulfone- polyvinylpyrrolidone (PES-PVP) has been developed for the first time. The main tasks are developing and producing pilot build OI filters and testing them both in vitro and in the sheep model for hemodialysis.

Project Terms:
3-Dimensional; Acute; Aftercare; Air; Animal Testing; Animals; Anticoagulants; Anticoagulation; Area; base; Biological Sciences; Blood; Blood Cells; Blood coagulation; blood filter; Blood flow; blood formation; Blood Platelets; blood pressure regulation; Brain; Chemistry; Chronic; Citrates; Clinical; Coagulation Process; Complex; cost; Costs and Benefits; Country; Data; Dementia; Deposition; design; Development; Dialysis patients; Dialysis procedure; Diffuse; Embolism; Engineering; Equipment; Excision; FDA approved; Fiber; Filtration; Frequencies; Future; Geometry; Health Personnel; Healthcare; hemocompatibility; Hemodialysis; Hemofiltration; Hemorrhage; Heparin; heparin-induced thrombocytopenia ; Hour; Housing; improved; In Vitro; in vivo; Industry; innovation; ischemic lesion; Kidney; Kidney Diseases; Legal patent; Life; Liquid substance; Lung; manufacturing process; Membrane; Minor; Modality; Modeling; Modification; multidisciplinary; new technology; novel; optimal treatments; Organ; Pathway interactions; Patients; Performance; Phase; Povidone; pressure; prevent; Procedures; Process; Production; programs; prototype; Renal Replacement Therapy; Research; Risk; Running; scale up; Sheep; Skin; solute; Surface; System; Technology; Testing; Thinness; Thrombus; Time; Translating; Treatment Cost; treatment duration; wearable device

Phase II

Contract Number: 5R44DK125230-02
Start Date: 9/15/2020    Completed: 8/31/2023
Phase II year
2021
Phase II Amount
$999,999
[Revised]For the past 60 years all hollow fiber dialyzers have had intraluminal blood flow. Novaflux outside-in filtration(OIF) creates a new design paradigm for hollow fiber dialyzers, changing dialyzer flow distribution so that bloodflows on the outside of the fiber and dialysate flows in the intraluminal space. This development reduces theneed for anticoagulation for acute or chronic dialytic therapies, including hemodialysis (HD) and providesincreased filter life for continuous renal replacement therapies (CRRT). In vitro data using conventionaldialyzers with OIF flow have found increased filter life to over 100 hours as compared to ~24 h with standardflow with statistically equivalent clearance. In OIF, thrombi have a minimal effect on the blood flow or filterpressure, diffusive clearance, or filtrate flux due to dynamic three-dimensional interconnected flow channelscreated in the inter fiber space. Novaflux research has developed prototype fibers that reverse the conventional dialyzer membranestructure to provide a thin tight smooth hemocompatible outer skin. The OI fiber will prevent damage to bloodcells or formation of platelet aggregates. Novaflux OI filter housings optimize the blood inlet design using novelflow geometries, modeling and computation flow dynamics to provide steady blood velocity and uniform bloodflow distribution. OIF dialyzers will be able to be produced by current dialyzer production equipment withrelatively minor modifications. The value proposition of OI dialyzers is to reduce or eliminate the need for anticoagulation for chronichemodialysis. This brings about key benefits including: 1) Lowering risk of heparin related complications suchas bleeding and blood loss post treatment; 2) Providing a no-anticoagulation alternative for Heparin-InducedThrombocytopenia; 3) Lowering the cost by $0.70 to $1.60 per treatment due to reduction in the use ofheparin; 4) Reduction of microemboli which may pass from the extracorporeal circuit to the patient, causingischemic lesions in organs such as the brain, which may contribute to dialysis dementia; and 5) Lower clottingpotential facilitates development of wearable renal treatments. The OI filter can help acute dialytic renal treatments by providing no or reduced anticoagulation andlonger filter life in CRRT, which translates into: 1) Lower cost and complexity for the healthcare provider; and 2)Reduced need for complex anticoagulation regimes, e.g., regional citrate anticoagulation. The Phase II will scale up the OIF membrane and housings to produce prototype OI dialyzers for invitro and animal studies to characterize performance and hemocompatibility. These studies will quantify thepotential of OI technology to eliminate or reduce anticoagulation for dialytic therapies and to provide clinicalbenefits and cost reductions compared to current acute and chronic therapies. The Specific Aims of this twoyear program are: Aim 1: Development of pilot scale production of OI fiber; Aim 2: Design the housing for theoutside-in filter based on CFD analysis and develop the dialyzer manufacturing/construction process for limitedproduction runs; Aim 3: To perform Ex vivo testing for the OI membrane and OI filter; and Aim 4: To performin vivo animal testing in the sheep model. The OI technology will also enable the development of wearabletechnologies due to inherent benefits of longer filter life.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
8. Project Narrative This project is to develop a prototype outside-in (OI) dialysis filter that have shown in preliminary studies to achieve >100 hours filter life without clogging or increase in filter pressure gradient. An asymmetric OI hollow fiber (membrane layer at the outside surface) based on the FDA approved polyethersulfone- polyvinylpyrrolidone (PES-PVP) has been developed for the first time. The main tasks are developing and producing pilot build OI filters and testing them both in vitro and in the sheep model for hemodialysis.

Project Terms:
<2-Pyrrolidinone, 1-ethenyl-, homopolymer>