Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal Surgery

The emergence of 3D-Printing technologies and subsequent medical applications have allowed for the development of Patient-specific implants (PSIs). There have been increasing reports of PSI application to spinal surgery over the last 5 years, including throughout the spine and to a range of patholog...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tajrian Amin, William C.H. Parr, Ralph J. Mobbs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Journal of Personalized Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4426/11/6/498
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spelling doaj-022c8ec578ca43a8b9a31c193c29b1712021-06-30T23:07:06ZengMDPI AGJournal of Personalized Medicine2075-44262021-06-011149849810.3390/jpm11060498Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal SurgeryTajrian Amin0William C.H. Parr1Ralph J. Mobbs2NeuroSpine Surgery Research Group (NSURG), Sydney 2000, AustraliaNeuroSpine Surgery Research Group (NSURG), Sydney 2000, AustraliaNeuroSpine Surgery Research Group (NSURG), Sydney 2000, AustraliaThe emergence of 3D-Printing technologies and subsequent medical applications have allowed for the development of Patient-specific implants (PSIs). There have been increasing reports of PSI application to spinal surgery over the last 5 years, including throughout the spine and to a range of pathologies, though largely for complex cases. Through a number of potential benefits, including improvements to the implant–bone interface and surgical workflow, PSIs aim to improve patient and surgical outcomes, as well as potentially provide new avenues for combating challenges routinely faced by spinal surgeons. However, obstacles to widespread acceptance and routine application include the lack of quality long-term data, research challenges and the practicalities of production and navigating the regulatory environment. While recognition of the significant potential of Spinal PSIs is evident in the literature, it is clear a number of key questions must be answered to inform future clinical and research practices. The spinal surgical community must selectively and ethically continue to offer PSIs to patients, simultaneously allowing for the necessary larger, comparative studies to be conducted, as well as continuing to provide optimal patient care, thereby ultimately determining the exact role of this technology and potentially improving outcomes.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4426/11/6/498Three-Dimensional Printing (3DP)custom implantpatient-specific implants (PSI)spinal surgery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tajrian Amin
William C.H. Parr
Ralph J. Mobbs
spellingShingle Tajrian Amin
William C.H. Parr
Ralph J. Mobbs
Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal Surgery
Journal of Personalized Medicine
Three-Dimensional Printing (3DP)
custom implant
patient-specific implants (PSI)
spinal surgery
author_facet Tajrian Amin
William C.H. Parr
Ralph J. Mobbs
author_sort Tajrian Amin
title Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal Surgery
title_short Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal Surgery
title_full Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal Surgery
title_fullStr Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Opinion Piece: Patient-Specific Implants May Be the Next Big Thing in Spinal Surgery
title_sort opinion piece: patient-specific implants may be the next big thing in spinal surgery
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Personalized Medicine
issn 2075-4426
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The emergence of 3D-Printing technologies and subsequent medical applications have allowed for the development of Patient-specific implants (PSIs). There have been increasing reports of PSI application to spinal surgery over the last 5 years, including throughout the spine and to a range of pathologies, though largely for complex cases. Through a number of potential benefits, including improvements to the implant–bone interface and surgical workflow, PSIs aim to improve patient and surgical outcomes, as well as potentially provide new avenues for combating challenges routinely faced by spinal surgeons. However, obstacles to widespread acceptance and routine application include the lack of quality long-term data, research challenges and the practicalities of production and navigating the regulatory environment. While recognition of the significant potential of Spinal PSIs is evident in the literature, it is clear a number of key questions must be answered to inform future clinical and research practices. The spinal surgical community must selectively and ethically continue to offer PSIs to patients, simultaneously allowing for the necessary larger, comparative studies to be conducted, as well as continuing to provide optimal patient care, thereby ultimately determining the exact role of this technology and potentially improving outcomes.
topic Three-Dimensional Printing (3DP)
custom implant
patient-specific implants (PSI)
spinal surgery
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4426/11/6/498
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