Bioprinting: A Strategy to Build Informative Models of Exposure and Disease

dc.contributor.affiliationPontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Instituto de Ciencias Ómicas y Biotecnología Aplicada (ICOBA)
dc.contributor.affiliationPontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Departamento de Ingeniería
dc.contributor.authorCaceres-Alban, J.
dc.contributor.authorSanchez Sifuentes, M.
dc.contributor.authorCasado, F.L.
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-13T16:58:42Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.description.abstractNovel additive manufacturing techniques are revolutionizing fields of industry providing more dimensions to control and the versatility of fabricating multi-material products. Medical applications hold great promise to manufacture constructs of mixed biologically compatible materials together with functional cells and tissues. We reviewed technologies and promising developments nurturing innovation of physiologically relevant models to study safety of chemicals that are hard to reproduce in current models, or diseases for which there are no models available. Extrusion-, inkjet- and laser-assisted bioprinting are the most used techniques. Hydrogels as constituents of bioinks and biomaterial inks are the most versatile materials to recreate physiological and pathophysiological microenvironments. The highlighted bioprinted models were chosen because they guarantee post-printing cellular viability while maintaining desirable mechanical properties of their constitutive bioinks or biomaterial inks to ensure their printability. Bioprinting is being readily adopted to overcome ethical concerns of in vivo models and improve the automation, reproducibility, geometry stability of traditional in vitro models. The challenges for advancing the technological level readiness of bioprinting require overcoming heterogeneity, microstructural complexity, dynamism and integration with other models, to generate multi-organ platforms that can inform about biological responses to chemical exposure, disease development and efficacy of novel therapies.
dc.description.sponsorshipFunding: The work of Fanny L. Casado was supported by the Project Concytec-Banco Mundial Mejoramiento y Ampliacion de los Servicios del Sistema Nacional de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovacion Tecnologica under Grant 8682-PE, administered by Prociencia under Contract 052-2018-FONDECYT-BM-IADT-AV
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1109/RBME.2022.3146293
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14657/206027
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
dc.relation.ispartofurn:issn:1937-3333
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.sourceIEEE Reviews in Biomedical Engineering; Vol. 16 (2023)
dc.subject3D bioprinting
dc.subjectBiomaterial
dc.subjectDynamism
dc.subjectSelf-healing hydrogels
dc.subjectBiocompatible material
dc.subjectField (mathematics)
dc.subjectBiological materials
dc.subject.ocdehttps://purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.04.04
dc.titleBioprinting: A Strategy to Build Informative Models of Exposure and Disease
dc.typehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
dc.type.otherArtículo
dc.type.versionhttps://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/version_types/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85/

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