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Medicine
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US surgeons transplant 3D ear made of living cells

  • The pioneering reconstruction was done using the patient’s own tissue, and may eventually be used to treat people with microtia, a rare birth defect
  • In patients with this condition, the external ear is small and not formed properly; it is currently treated using either synthetic materials or a graft

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A 3D bioimplant of an ear lobe that was developed by 3DBio Therapeutics.  Photo: 3DBio Therapeutics via AFP
Agence France-Presse

A US medical team said on Thursday they had reconstructed a human ear using the patient’s own tissue to create a 3D bioimplant, a pioneering procedure they hope can be used to treat people with a rare birth defect.

The surgery was performed as part of an early-stage clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the implant for people with microtia, in which the external ear is small and not formed properly.

AuriNovo, as the implant is called, was developed by the company 3DBio Therapeutics while the surgery was led by Arturo Bonilla, founder and director of the Microtia-Congenital Ear Deformity Institute in San Antonio, Texas.

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“As a physician who has treated thousands of children with microtia from across the country and around the world, I am inspired by what this technology may mean for microtia patients and their families,” Bonilla said in a statement.

He said he hoped the implant would one day replace the current treatment for microtia, which involves either grafting cartilage from a patient’s ribs or using synthetic materials, porous polyethylene (PPE), to reconstruct outer ears.

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The procedure involves 3D scanning the patient’s opposite ear to create a blueprint, then collecting a sample of their ear cartilage cells and growing them to a sufficient quantity.

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