Cancer patient receives 3D-printed ribs

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For the first time in history, a patient has received a custom, 3D-printed titanium implant to replace part of his rib cage.

The 54-year-old Spanish man had chest wall sarcoma, a cancerous tumour that grows in the chest wall and, in this case, had grown around his sternum and part of his rib cage.

To excise the tumour completely, surgeons also had to remove that part of his skeleton.

A flat titanium plate is used in there type of case to reinforce the structure of the rib cage Usually but these are not the great options. They can come loose, and increase the risk of complications.

But 3D printing is now at a point where it’s a viable option for quickly creating custom implants designed specifically for individual patients.

The surgical team at Salamanca University Hospital in Salamanca, Spain, commissioned Melbourne, Australia-based medical device company Anatomics to create a customisable titanium implant that could replicate the complicated structure of the sternum and rib cage.

The team used high-resolution CT scans of the patient’s chest to re-create a model of the chest wall and the tumour that was attached to it.

This 3D model allowed the surgeon to accurately plan where to cut the patient’s rib cage.

It also allowed Anatomics to create an accurate implant that would match the excision, as well as the individual size and shape of the patient’s chest.

To print the implant, Anatomics sent the file to the CSIRO’s 3D printing laboratory, Lab 22, which houses a AU$1.3 million Arcam printer that prints in metal. This operates using a powerful electron beam, which melts metal powder into a 3D object, layer by fine layer.

Previously, Lab 22 has helped with the manufacture of a 3D-printed titanium heel-bone implant.

Once printed, finished and polished, the implant was couriered to the Salamanca University Hospital, where it was implanted into the patient’s chest. It has now been two weeks since the surgery, and the patient has been discharged is recovering well.