Designed for the treatment of pulmonary artery stenosis and aortic coarctation in neonates, infants, and children, the stent can be periodically expanded over time to keep up with vessel growth.


Summary: The FDA has approved the Minima, an expandable cardiac stent designed for neonates, infants, and young children with aortic coarctation or pulmonary artery stenosis. Developed by Renata Medical, this stent can expand as the child grows, offering a minimally invasive alternative to open-heart surgery or balloon angioplasty. Based on clinical trials led by Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, the stent has shown a high success rate in treating stenosis.

Three Key Takeaways:

  1. Expandable Design for Growing Patients: The Minima stent can be expanded from 5 millimeters to 24 millimeters as a child grows, providing a long-term, minimally invasive solution for patients with aortic coarctation or pulmonary artery stenosis.
  2. FDA Approval Based on Clinical Success: The stent received FDA approval after a clinical trial showed that 97.6% of patients experienced effective relief from their stenosis, with no additional surgeries or major complications within six months of implantation.
  3. Minimally Invasive Alternative to Surgery: This new stent offers a significant improvement over traditional treatments, such as balloon angioplasty or repeat open-heart surgery, allowing many patients to avoid major cardiac operations while receiving optimal care.

In 2022, a team from Children’s Hospital Los Angeles implanted a novel cardiac stent designed specifically for babies and young children that can be expanded as a child grows—all the way to adult size.

Now, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted approval for this new device, based on data from a national clinical trial led by Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. The stent, called the Minima, was approved Aug 28 for neonates, infants, and young children with aortic coarctation or branch pulmonary artery stenosis.

Just two days after that approval, the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles team implanted the stent in a young patient—the first commercial use of the device in the United States.

“For the first time, we have a vascular stent that’s specifically made for our smallest patients and can potentially provide a lifetime solution for them,” says Darren Berman, MD, director of congenital interventional catheterization at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and national principal investigator of the study, in a release. “This is going to help so many babies and young children. It’s a groundbreaking moment.”

A Minimally Invasive Option

Balloon-mounted vascular stents have been used in pediatric patients since the 1980s. But options have been limited in pediatrics, especially for infants and young children.

“Virtually every stent we use in the catheterization lab for children was originally designed for and tested in adults,” says Patrick Sullivan, MD, a congenital interventional cardiologist and site principal investigator at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, in a release.

The approval of the Minima creates a new, minimally invasive option for neonates and infants with narrowing in the aorta or pulmonary arteries—coarctation of the aorta or pulmonary artery stenosis. Patients typically go home the day after receiving the stent.

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Previously the only options for babies with recoarctation of the aorta were a balloon angioplasty—which is not as effective as a stent—or repeat open-heart surgery. For babies with pulmonary artery stenosis, interventional cardiologists could sometimes make other stents work, but size was often an issue.

“This new device opens up treatment options that will allow many of our patients to avoid another major cardiac operation,” says Sullivan in a release. “And since this stent is designed specifically for babies with these issues, it will allow us to perform these procedures in a more optimal way.”

How it works

The FDA’s approval was based on results from the pivotal clinical trial led by Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. The prospective nonrandomized study of 42 patients across seven centers in the US—including 10 patients treated at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles—found that 97.6% of patients experienced effective relief from their stenosis.

Six months after receiving the Minima, no patients needed additional surgical intervention for stent dysfunction, and none had experienced any major adverse events.

The stent, which is made by Renata Medical, comes mounted and crimped onto a balloon inside a catheter. Featuring long, thin frames called struts, it can be crimped down to less than 2 millimeters. This allows it to be delivered via the special catheter, which is as slim as a piece of spaghetti.

Importantly, the stent is designed to be adjusted as a child grows to adulthood—expanding from 5 millimeters up to 24 millimeters.

Berman anticipates that babies who receive the stent will likely need to have it expanded two to four times over their life. “Those expansions will be done through minimally invasive catheter procedures,” he notes in a release. “The goal is for this to last a lifetime.”

He adds that Children’s Hospital Los Angeles’ leadership of the pivotal trial was a team effort across the entire Heart Institute—a pediatric cardiac program.

“It takes extensive collaboration and specialized expertise to bring a breakthrough technology like this to small and fragile patients,” Berman says in a release. “We are thrilled to offer this new option and to lead the way in advancing care for babies and children with congenital heart defects.”

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