3D printing of airway tube helps save U.S. baby

A baby that doctors had said would probably not leave the hospital alive could breathe normally for the first time with an artificial tube

Posted: May 23, 2013 3:43 PM ET

Last Updated: May 23, 2013 3:42 PM ET

Kaiba Gionfriddo plays with the family's dog, Bandit, outside his Youngstown, Ohio home on Tuesday. He's now able to breathe normally with a first-of-a-kind biodegradable airway. Kaiba Gionfriddo plays with the family's dog, Bandit, outside his Youngstown, Ohio home on Tuesday. He's now able to breathe normally with a first-of-a-kind biodegradable airway. (Mark Stahl/Associated Press)


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In a medical first, doctors used plastic particles and a 3D laser printer to create an airway splint to save the life of a baby boy who used to stop breathing nearly every day.
It's the latest advance from the booming field of regenerative medicine, making body parts in the lab.
In the case of Kaiba Gionfriddo, doctors didn't have a moment to spare. Because of a birth defect, the little Ohio boy's airway kept collapsing, causing his breathing to stop and often his heart, too. Doctors in Michigan had been researching artificial airway splints but had not implanted one in a patient yet.
In a single day, they "printed out" 100 tiny tubes, using computer-guided lasers to stack and fuse thin layers of plastic instead of paper and ink to form various shapes and sizes. The next day, with special permission from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, they implanted one of these tubes in Kaiba, the first time this has been done.
Suddenly, a baby that doctors had said would probably not leave the hospital alive could breathe normally for the first time. He was 3 months old when the operation was done last year and is nearly 19 months old now. He is about to have his tracheotomy tube removed; it was placed when he was a couple months old and needed a breathing machine. And he has not had a single breathing crisis since coming home a year ago.
"He's a pretty healthy kid right now," said Dr. Glenn Green, a pediatric ear, nose and throat specialist at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where the operation was done. It's described in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.
Independent experts praised the work and the potential for 3D printing to create more body parts to solve unmet medical needs.
"It's the wave of the future," said Dr. Robert Weatherly, a pediatric specialist at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. "I'm impressed by what they were able to accomplish."
So far, only a few adults have had trachea, or windpipe transplants, usually to replace ones destroyed by cancer. The windpipes came from dead donors or were lab-made, sometimes using stem cells. Last month, a 2-year-old girl born without a windpipe received one grown from her own stem cells onto a plastic scaffold at a hospital in Peoria, Ill.
Kaiba had a different problem — an incompletely formed bronchus, one of the two airways that branch off the windpipe like pant legs to the lungs. About 2,000 babies are born with such defects each year in the United States and most outgrow them by age 2 or 3, as more tissue develops.
In severe cases, parents learn of the defect when the child suddenly stops breathing and dies. That almost happened when Kaiba was 6 weeks old at a restaurant with his parents, April and Bryan Gionfriddo, who live in Youngstown, in northeast Ohio.
"He turned blue and stopped breathing on us," and his father did CPR to revive him, April Gionfriddo said.
More episodes followed, and Kaiba had to go on a breathing machine when he was 2 months old. Doctors told the couple his condition was grave.
"Quite a few of them said he had a good chance of not leaving the hospital alive. It was pretty scary," his mother said. "We pretty much prayed every night, hoping that he would pull through."
Then a doctor at Akron Children's Hospital, Marc Nelson, suggested the experimental work in Michigan. Researchers there were testing airway splints made from biodegradable polyester that is sometimes used to repair bone and cartilage.
Kaiba had the operation on Feb. 9, 2012. The splint was placed around his defective bronchus, which was stitched to the splint to keep it from collapsing. The splint has a slit along its length so it can expand and grow as the child does — something a permanent, artificial implant could not do.
The plastic is designed to degrade and gradually be absorbed by the body over three years, as healthy tissue forms to replace it, said the biomedical engineer who led the work, Scott Hollister.
Green and Scott Hollister have a patent pending on the device and Hollister has a financial interest in a company that makes scaffolds for implants.
Dr. John Bent, a pediatric specialist at New York's Albert Einstein College of Medicine, said only time will tell if this proves to be a permanent solution, but he praised the researchers for persevering to develop it.
"I can think of a handful of children I have seen in the last two decades who suffered greatly … that likely would have benefited from this technology," Bent said.

First 3D Printed Car To Hit The Roads In Two Years

The URBEE 1
It might just be the precursor to the next industrial revolution and slowly but surely, 3D printing is expanding its presence into the realm of manufacturing. Now it seems that one of the first major industries to benefit from 3D printing is the same one that spawned the assembly line revolution – the automotive industry.
Israeli company Stratasys, already a major player in the field  and its subsidiary, RedEye On Demand, will be part of a project aimed at putting the first 3D printed car on the roads within two years, in partnership with KOR EcoLogic.

HIV prevalence rising among gays[made for each other]
HIV/AIDS prevalence among gay men and men who have sex with men (MSM) is growing with prevention, treatment, and care programmes meant to reverse the pandemic often neglecting this population.
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Stigma and discrimination against gay men and MSM flourish with impunity in countries that receive significant donor funding for HIV/AIDS. National planning documents and donor funding agreements mention MSM, but little programming actually exists. Epidemiological surveillance that could help inform programs serving MSM lags far behind strategic information collected on other populations, and little to no attention, according to studies, is paid to the needs of transgender people.These are the findings of the second report in the series, Achieving an AIDS-Free Generation for Gay Men and Other Men Having Sex With Men (MSM) by BONELA in partnership with amfAR and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg (School of Public Health).
The study was specifically focused on Botswana, Malawi, Namibia, Swaziland, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.The report examines the financing and implementation of programmes for gay men and MSM in a region at the heart of the HIV pandemic through a combination of desk research and in-country consultations conducted by civil society advocates with implementers, policy makers, academics, and people living with HIV.
While the global conversation focuses on novel approaches to HIV treatment and prevention, gay men, other MSM, and transgender individuals (GMT) struggle to obtain the most basic health services. They are isolated, criminalised, blackmailed and beaten, reveals the report.
Despite this, GMT communities in Southern Africa have shown great resilience and determination. Each country studied, numerous community-led programmes supported by both large and small donors, are making substantial inroads against pervasive stigma and discrimination. These six Southern African states have made significant progress in reducing the number of new HIV infections among their adult populations, according to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). Over the past 10 years, the number of annual new infections has dropped substantially, with declines ranging from 25 in Swaziland to as much as 63 percent in Botswana.
The report says this is not a small accomplishment, which comes as a result of persistent, concerted efforts by national governments, donor countries, programme implementers, researchers and civil society.Further, the report states that the same level of effort is required to change the trajectory of the HIV epidemic among GMT.
"Human rights violations permeate every facet of life for these men and women, and lack of robust engagement by donors, implementers, and governments has only perpetuated further abuse," argues the report. The report recommends efforts to increase donor and national government engagement in preventing and treating HIV infection among GMT and that comprehensive human rights programming that addresses stigma and discriminations must be included.
The report has also found a striking incongruence between donor policy and funding patterns. The top funders of HIV/AIDS programs globally-the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund) have clear policy commitments to addressing the epidemic among GMT. PEPFAR's Blueprint for an AIDS-Free Generation and the Global Fund's Strategy in Relation to Sexual Orientation and Gender Identities (SOGI) make a concrete case for the need, type, and scope of investments in programs serving GMT. However, the report shows that funding and implementation come nowhere close to upholding these policy commitments.
Though PEPFAR and other financing mechanisms under the the US Department of State have gone to great lengths in recent years to target new funding opportunities to programs that support GMT, resources allocated do not approach potential need, so says the report. The six countries mentioned in this report comprised 10 percent of total PEPFAR funding between 2007 and 2011, but four of the six's annual budgets contained no programming for MSM. When included, budgeted amounts were difficult to decipher, frequently miniscule, and often shared among multiple populations, reducing the certainty that MSM were reached at all. There was also no mention of transgender individuals.
The Global Fund has one of the most progressive donor policies in relation to GMT, delineating clear responsibilities for every actor within its financing model. However, the report says of the $1.5 billion in funding allocated to these six countries since 2001, only 0.07 percent was for programs specifically targeting GMT.Moreover, the majority of this support is concentrated in just one of these six countries (Namibia).  The report argues that this percentage may not reflect the full demand from targeted programs in these countries as some proposals containing strong programs for MSM and other key populations were not approved for reasons other than technical merit.
The report advocates for national governments to decriminalise same sex sexual practices and support programs that reduce stigma and discrimination against marginalised groups. Donors also have been urged to actively support such efforts through diplomatic channels and funding for civil society groups working on these issues.Among other things, national governments have been encouraged to develop implementation plans that operationalize national strategic frameworks, a step that would increase the likelihood that the commitments to GMT in those documents are actualised.

 comment:- uncommon disease and uncommon sex practises