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Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications

Biofabrication has emerged as an attractive strategy to personalise medical care and provide new treatments for common organ damage or diseases. While it has made impactful headway in e.g., skin grafting, drug testing and cancer research purposes, its application to treat musculoskeletal tissue diso...

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Autores principales: Naghieh, Saman, Lindberg, Gabriella, Tamaddon, Maryam, Liu, Chaozong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8466376/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34562945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering8090123
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author Naghieh, Saman
Lindberg, Gabriella
Tamaddon, Maryam
Liu, Chaozong
author_facet Naghieh, Saman
Lindberg, Gabriella
Tamaddon, Maryam
Liu, Chaozong
author_sort Naghieh, Saman
collection PubMed
description Biofabrication has emerged as an attractive strategy to personalise medical care and provide new treatments for common organ damage or diseases. While it has made impactful headway in e.g., skin grafting, drug testing and cancer research purposes, its application to treat musculoskeletal tissue disorders in a clinical setting remains scarce. Albeit with several in vitro breakthroughs over the past decade, standard musculoskeletal treatments are still limited to palliative care or surgical interventions with limited long-term effects and biological functionality. To better understand this lack of translation, it is important to study connections between basic science challenges and developments with translational hurdles and evolving frameworks for this fully disruptive technology that is biofabrication. This review paper thus looks closely at the processing stage of biofabrication, specifically at the bioinks suitable for musculoskeletal tissue fabrication and their trends of usage. This includes underlying composite bioink strategies to address the shortfalls of sole biomaterials. We also review recent advances made to overcome long-standing challenges in the field of biofabrication, namely bioprinting of low-viscosity bioinks, controlled delivery of growth factors, and the fabrication of spatially graded biological and structural scaffolds to help biofabricate more clinically relevant constructs. We further explore the clinical application of biofabricated musculoskeletal structures, regulatory pathways, and challenges for clinical translation, while identifying the opportunities that currently lie closest to clinical translation. In this article, we consider the next era of biofabrication and the overarching challenges that need to be addressed to reach clinical relevance.
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spelling pubmed-84663762021-09-27 Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications Naghieh, Saman Lindberg, Gabriella Tamaddon, Maryam Liu, Chaozong Bioengineering (Basel) Review Biofabrication has emerged as an attractive strategy to personalise medical care and provide new treatments for common organ damage or diseases. While it has made impactful headway in e.g., skin grafting, drug testing and cancer research purposes, its application to treat musculoskeletal tissue disorders in a clinical setting remains scarce. Albeit with several in vitro breakthroughs over the past decade, standard musculoskeletal treatments are still limited to palliative care or surgical interventions with limited long-term effects and biological functionality. To better understand this lack of translation, it is important to study connections between basic science challenges and developments with translational hurdles and evolving frameworks for this fully disruptive technology that is biofabrication. This review paper thus looks closely at the processing stage of biofabrication, specifically at the bioinks suitable for musculoskeletal tissue fabrication and their trends of usage. This includes underlying composite bioink strategies to address the shortfalls of sole biomaterials. We also review recent advances made to overcome long-standing challenges in the field of biofabrication, namely bioprinting of low-viscosity bioinks, controlled delivery of growth factors, and the fabrication of spatially graded biological and structural scaffolds to help biofabricate more clinically relevant constructs. We further explore the clinical application of biofabricated musculoskeletal structures, regulatory pathways, and challenges for clinical translation, while identifying the opportunities that currently lie closest to clinical translation. In this article, we consider the next era of biofabrication and the overarching challenges that need to be addressed to reach clinical relevance. MDPI 2021-09-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8466376/ /pubmed/34562945 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering8090123 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Naghieh, Saman
Lindberg, Gabriella
Tamaddon, Maryam
Liu, Chaozong
Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications
title Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications
title_full Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications
title_fullStr Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications
title_full_unstemmed Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications
title_short Biofabrication Strategies for Musculoskeletal Disorders: Evolution towards Clinical Applications
title_sort biofabrication strategies for musculoskeletal disorders: evolution towards clinical applications
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8466376/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34562945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering8090123
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