4.7 Article

Personalized, Mechanically Strong, and Biodegradable Coronary Artery Stents via Melt Electrowriting

Journal

ACS MACRO LETTERS
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages 1732-1739

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.0c00644

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Melbourne
  2. Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship (Melbourne International Research Scholarship)
  3. Australian Research Council (ARC) [IC160100026]
  4. Queensland University of Technology's Institute of Heath and Biomedical Innovation (Innovation Ideas Grant)

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Biodegradable coronary artery stents are sought-after alternatives to permanent stents. These devices are designed to degrade after the blood vessel heals, leaving behind a regenerated artery. The original generation of clinically available biodegradable stents required significantly thicker struts (similar to 150 mu m) than nondegradable ones to ensure sufficient mechanical strength. However, these thicker struts proved to be a key contributor to the clinical failure of the stents. A current challenge lies in the fabrication of stents that possess both thin struts and adequate mechanical strength. In this contribution, we describe a method for the bottom-up, additive manufacturing of biodegradable composite stents with ultrathin fibers and superior mechanical properties compared to the base polymer. Specifically, we illustrate that melt electrowriting (MEW) can be used to 3D print composite structures with thin struts (60-80 mu m) and a high degree of geometric complexity required for stenting applications. Additionally, this technology allows additive manufacture of personalized stents that are customized to a patient's unique anatomy and disease state. Furthermore, we illustrate that polycaprolactone-reduced graphene oxide nanocomposites have superior mechanical properties compared to original polycaprolactone without detriment to the material's cytocompatibility and that customizable stent-like structures can be fabricated from these materials with struts as thin as 60 mu m, well below the target value for clinical use of 80 mu m.

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