First-ever 3D-printed vertebra implanted in 12-year-old cancer
patient’s spine
EIJING – A
12-year-old cancer patient in China underwent a first-of-its-kind operation to
implant a 3D-printed vertebra into his spine, Reuters reported.
During the
5-hour procedure, surgeons at Peking University Hospital in Beijing removed a
tumor from Qin Minglin’s spine before implanting the 3D-printed vertebra. The
novel device was made from titanium powder and included a series of tiny pores,
which will allow the bone to grow and bond to the structure as it heals.
Currently,
the standard procedure for this kind of operation involves removing the bone
and inserting a titanium tube held in place by screws and surgical cement.
However, the tube can become detached over time. For this novel procedure,
doctors used a combination of scans and specialized engineering software to
create a perfect replica of the piece of the patient’s spine that needed to be
replaced.
“…We can
use iconographic tests on patients such as a computed [tomography], or CT
scans, and convert the CT data into 3D-printing data in order to produce an
internal fixation with exactly the same structure as the patient's bone
structure,” Dr. Liu Zhongjun, director of orthopedics at Peking University
Hospital told Reuters. “When it is implanted into a human being, it perfectly matches
the patient's own anatomical structure."
Zhongjun
added that using the specially made implant would mean a faster recovery for
Qin and increased mobility after he heals.
"Using
existing technology, the patient's head needs to be framed with pins after
surgery," he explained. "But with 3D-printing technology, we can
simulate the shape of the vertebra, which is much stronger and more convenient
than traditional methods."
Qin was
diagnosed with Ewing’s sarcoma after he suffered a neck injury while heading a
ball in sports practice. Ewing’s sarcoma is a cancerous tumor that grows in the
bones or in the tissue around bones (soft tissue)—often the legs, pelvis, ribs,
arms or spine, according to St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital. The
condition affects about 200 children and young adults a year in the United
States, and when found early, can be treated successfully in up to 75 percent
of cases, according to the National Cancer Institute.
"When
I was told that he would be the first case of this kind, I was a little torn,”
Qin’s mother, Xu Minglin told Reuters. “But in the end, I considered that 3D
technology has already been applied in the medical world, and they must be
confident."
One month
after surgery, Qin’s doctors say he’s on the road to recovery and his mother
said he’s in good spirits knowing that his procedure may help provide new
treatment options for spinal replacement surgery patients.
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