4.3 Review

Bioprinting Technology in Skin, Heart, Pancreas and Cartilage Tissues: Progress and Challenges in Clinical Practice

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182010806

Keywords

bioprinting; skin; heart; pancreas; cartilage; tissue engineering; regenerative medicine; clinical applications

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Bioprinting is an emerging technology with great potential in tissue engineering, but it faces limitations and challenges due to insufficient complexity in design and the lack of clear regulations and guidelines. Despite years of research, bridging the gap between bench and bedside remains a significant hurdle.
Bioprinting is an emerging additive manufacturing technique which shows an outstanding potential for shaping customized functional substitutes for tissue engineering. Its introduction into the clinical space in order to replace injured organs could ideally overcome the limitations faced with allografts. Presently, even though there have been years of prolific research in the field, there is a wide gap to bridge in order to bring bioprinting from bench to bedside . This is due to the fact that bioprinted designs have not yet reached the complexity required for clinical use, nor have clear GMP (good manufacturing practices) rules or precise regulatory guidelines been established. This review provides an overview of some of the most recent and remarkable achievements for skin, heart, pancreas and cartilage bioprinting breakthroughs while highlighting the critical shortcomings for each tissue type which is keeping this technique from becoming widespread reality.

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