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3D Printing Part of an ‘Unparalleled Period of Invention’

3D printing technology applications come alive in applications ranging from developing packaging machinery to producing personalized medical devices to printing custom medications in a patient’s home.

Plastic grippers made via 3D printing. (Photo from igus.)
Plastic grippers made via 3D printing. (Photo from igus.)

The FDA acknowledges that “advances in material science, digital health, 3D printing, as well as other technologies continue to drive an unparalleled period of invention in medical devices.”

The perspective comes from a Nov. 26, 2018 statement by FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb and Jeff Shuren, Director of the Center for Devices and Radiological Health, outlining transformative new steps to modernize FDA’s 510(k) program to advance the review of the safety and effectiveness of medical devices.

FDA’s Medical Applications of 3D Printing web page notes that commercially available 3D-printed medical devices include instrumentation, implants and external prostheses. Says the agency, “Some devices are printed from a standard design to make multiple identical copies of the same device. Other devices, called patient-matched or patient-specific devices, are created from a specific patient’s imaging data.”

The report says 3D printing/additive manufacturing can also “be used to reduce waste by using fewer raw materials and require fewer manufacturing steps.” The agency also points to the patient angle, noting, “Scientists are researching how to use the 3D printing process to manufacture living organs such as a heart or liver, but this research is in [its] early stages of development.”

3D printing labs in hospitals represent an emerging trend, according to the 2017 ASME.org article, Top 5 Ways 3D Printing Is Changing the Medical Field. The story explains that this work “focuses on printing patient-specific models prior to surgery to look at a patient’s specific anatomy.” Low-cost prosthetics, customized medical implants, customized protective devices and aids, and future biomaterials for organ structures and complex organs represented the other four 3D printing methods.

A Nov. 26, 2018 Business Wire report describes an exciting 3D printing application involving the model of a patient’s left atrial appendage “created with Stratasys and Materialise technology… intended to allow surgeons to select the appropriate device and plan the optimal approach to occlude the LAA.”

3D printing in packaging

Beyond its therapeutic uses for patients, 3D printing is also involved in the packaging space. One example is Johnson & Johnson Medical Devices Companies’ Center for Service Innovation at the Texas Medical Center, which includes a 3D printing lab that’s part of the company’s effort to accelerate breakthrough medical device technologies.

Quadpack's department of Design and Advanced Technologies has invested in the latest 3D printing technology at its U.K. research and design facility, using a Stratasys J750 printer to accelerate the early stages of custom package design and development, while helping to test new ideas.

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Break out of the ordinary: see what’s new in life sciences packaging