Ethical considerations relating to different types of heart valve prosthetics
Summary
With the increasing global population and average lifespan more people suffer from age
associated diseases such as cardiovascular disease. In some cases the disease can be
treated with novel medical devices such as pacemakers but for others transplantation
remains the only viable option. This is often the case for patients with heart valve failure.
However, there is a worldwide organ shortage for transplantation. This has led to the
development of different types of heart valve prosthetics. Mechanical heart valves are
durable but increase the risk of thromboembolism, resulting in patients needing to take
lifelong anticoagulant therapy which has severe side effects. Patients with bioprosthetic
heart valve prosthetics do not need to take anticoagulant therapy but risk repeated
open-heart surgery because bioprosthetic heart valves are less durable. Tissue-engineered
heart valves are newest to the market but have not yet reached their full potential and are
therefore not yet frequently used. The development of these different types of heart valves
has led to multiple different ethical discussions. Here, we will discuss which types of heart
valves have given rise to which ethical considerations and whether these discussions have
ceased or remain applicable with the development of new types of heart valve prosthetics. In
particular we will try to gauge whether past and current ethical discussions regarding heart
valve prosthetics will be applicable to the future regenerative tissue-engineered heart valves
which are not yet commercially available.