4.4 Review

Recent progress in three-dimensionally-printed dosage forms from a pharmacist perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 10, Pages 1367-1390

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jpp/rgab168

Keywords

3D printing; dosage form; oral drug delivery; transdermal; implant; pharmacist

Funding

  1. USYD-CSC (University of Sydney -China Scholarship Council) scholarship [202008320366]

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This review summarises the recent development of 3D-printed dosage forms, including their applications, active pharmaceutical ingredients, printers and materials used, and discussions on topics such as personalised dosing, drug combinations, and compounding pharmacies. 3D printing is expected to become a common tool for personalised medications and revolutionise the future of pharmacy practice.
Objective Additive manufacturing (AM), commonly known as 3D printing (3DP), has opened new frontiers in pharmaceutical applications. This review is aimed to summarise the recent development of 3D-printed dosage forms, from a pharmacists' perspective. Methods Keywords including additive manufacturing, 3D printing and drug delivery were used for literature search in PubMed, Excerpta Medica Database (EMBASE) and Web of Science, to identify articles published in the year 2020. Results For each 3DP study, the active pharmaceutical ingredients, 3D printers and materials used for the printing were tabulated and discussed. 3DP has found its applications in various dosage forms for oral delivery, transdermal delivery, rectal delivery, vaginal delivery, implant and bone scaffolding. Several topics were discussed in detail, namely patient-specific dosing, customisable drug administration, multidrug approach, varying drug release, compounding pharmacy, regulatory progress and future perspectives. AM is expected to become a common tool in compounding pharmacies to make polypills and personalised medications. Conclusion 3DP is an enabling tool to fabricate dosage forms with intricate structure designs, tailored dosing, drug combinations and controlled release, all of which lend it to be highly conducive to personalisation, thereby revolutionising the future of pharmacy practice.

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