Angelats Lobo, David
Ginestra, Paola
Ceretti, Elisabetta
Puig i Miquel, Teresa
Ciurana, Quim de
2021-06-29T06:08:56Z
2021-06-29T06:08:56Z
2021-06-28
http://hdl.handle.net/10256/19663
https://doi.org/10.3390/mi12070764
035460
2072-666X
Three-dimensional printing technologies allow for the fabrication of complex parts with accurate geometry and less production time. When applied to biomedical applications, two different approaches, known as direct or indirect bioprinting, may be performed. The classical way is to print a support structure, the scaffold, and then culture the cells. Due to the low efficiency of this method, direct bioprinting has been proposed, with or without the use of scaffolds. Scaffolds are the most common technology to culture cells, but bioassembly of cells may be an interesting methodology to mimic the native microenvironment, the extracellular matrix, where the cells interact between themselves. The purpose of this review is to give an updated report about the materials, the bioprinting technologies, and the cells used in cancer research for breast, brain, lung, liver, reproductive, gastric, skin, and bladder associated cancers, to help the development of possible treatments to lower the mortality rates, increasing the effectiveness of guided therapies. This work introduces direct bioprinting to be considered as a key factor above the main tissue engineering technologie
eng
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Attribution 4.0 International
Three-dimensional printing
Impressió 3D
Materials biomèdics
Biomedical materials
Cancer Cell Direct Bioprinting: A Focused Review
info:eu-repo/semantics/article