scholarly journals Review on Computer-Aided Design and Manufacturing of Drug Delivery Scaffolds for Cell Guidance and Tissue Regeneration

Author(s):  
Aurelio Salerno ◽  
Paolo A. Netti

In the last decade, additive manufacturing (AM) processes have updated the fields of biomaterials science and drug delivery as they promise to realize bioengineered multifunctional devices and implantable tissue engineering (TE) scaffolds virtually designed by using computer-aided design (CAD) models. However, the current technological gap between virtual scaffold design and practical AM processes makes it still challenging to realize scaffolds capable of encoding all structural and cell regulatory functions of the native extracellular matrix (ECM) of health and diseased tissues. Indeed, engineering porous scaffolds capable of sequestering and presenting even a complex array of biochemical and biophysical signals in a time- and space-regulated manner, require advanced automated platforms suitable of processing simultaneously biomaterials, cells, and biomolecules at nanometric-size scale. The aim of this work was to review the recent scientific literature about AM fabrication of drug delivery scaffolds for TE. This review focused on bioactive molecule loading into three-dimensional (3D) porous scaffolds, and their release effects on cell fate and tissue growth. We reviewed CAD-based strategies, such as bioprinting, to achieve passive and stimuli-responsive drug delivery scaffolds for TE and cancer precision medicine. Finally, we describe the authors’ perspective regarding the next generation of CAD techniques and the advantages of AM, microfluidic, and soft lithography integration for enhancing 3D porous scaffold bioactivation toward functional bioengineered tissues and organs.

2013 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hazwan Halimoon ◽  
Muhd Nazrul Hisham Zainal Alam

Polymers have been widely accepted as materials for the fabrication of microbioreactor prototypes. In this work, microfabrication strategies namely the micromachining and casting (soft lithography) with the use poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) polymers as substrates for fabrications were discussed in details. A step-by-step illustration (including examples on digital prototyping of the microbioreactor by using a computer-aided-design (CAD) software) for the above mentioned micromachining procedures, and discussions on the necessary design considerations were presented as well. In the work, we showed the simplicity of such machining procedures for the fabrication of microbioreactor prototypes. It was confirmed that through micromachining, microbioreactor prototypes can be fabricated by using poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) polymers with high precision (down to one tenth of mm). It was also demonstrated that the processing time for the fabrication of the microbioreactor prototypes was in the order of few hours and maybe days for a complex reactor design. 


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