4.7 Article

Integrating Melt Electrowriting and Fused Deposition Modeling to Fabricate Hybrid Scaffolds Supportive of Accelerated Bone Regeneration

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202302057

Keywords

3D printing; angiogenesis; bone repair; fused deposition modeling; melt electrowriting; scaffold architecture

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This study demonstrates the potential of integrating different additive manufacturing approaches, specifically MEW and FDM, for the development of regenerative biomaterials. By leveraging the advantages of these two methods, hybrid MEW-FDM constructs are able to achieve enhanced bone healing outcomes.
Emerging additive manufacturing (AM) strategies can enable the engineering of hierarchal scaffold structures for guiding tissue regeneration. Here, the advantages of two AM approaches, melt electrowriting (MEW) and fused deposition modelling (FDM), are leveraged and integrated to fabricate hybrid scaffolds for large bone defect healing. MEW is used to fabricate a microfibrous core to guide bone healing, while FDM is used to fabricate a stiff outer shell for mechanical support, with constructs being coated with pro-osteogenic calcium phosphate (CaP) nano-needles. Compared to MEW scaffolds alone, hybrid scaffolds prevent soft tissue collapse into the defect region and support increased vascularization and higher levels of new bone formation 12 weeks post-implantation. In an additional group, hybrid scaffolds are also functionalized with BMP2 via binding to the CaP coating, which further accelerates healing and facilitates the complete bridging of defects after 12 weeks. Histological analyses demonstrate that such scaffolds support the formation of well-defined annular bone, with an open medullary cavity, smooth periosteal surface, and no evidence of abnormal ectopic bone formation. These results demonstrate the potential of integrating different AM approaches for the development of regenerative biomaterials, and in particular, demonstrate the enhanced bone healing outcomes possible with hybrid MEW-FDM constructs. This work outlines the development of a hybrid scaffold consisting of a micro-fibrous core made using melt electrowriting (MEW) and an outer shell made using fused deposition modeling (FDM). This study demonstrates the potential of integrating different additive manufacturing approaches for the development of regenerative biomaterials, and in particular, demonstrates the enhanced bone healing outcomes possible with hybrid MEW-FDM constructs.image

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