Researchers 3D-Print an Active, Viable Tumor
Researchers from Tel Aviv University printed an entire active and viable glioblastoma tumor. The breakthrough achievement enables faster prediction of best treatments for patients.
“Our innovation gives us unprecedented access to 3D tumors that better imitate the clinical scenario, enabling optimal investigation," says the study's lead researcher, Prof. Ronit Satchi-Fainaro .
Topics:
Medical
Medical
More From SAE Media Group
Medical Design Briefs
Novel Radiation Therapy Delays Brain Cancer Regrowth
Medical Design Briefs INSIDER
Drug-Carrying Nanoparticles Cross Blood-Brain Barrier
More
Medical Design Briefs
Videos of the Month
Tech Briefs
'Drug Factory' Implants Target Cancer Cells
Medical Design Briefs
2024 Create the Future Design Contest: Medical Grand Prize Winner - NETrolyze
Tech Briefs
Device Tests Drugs on Tumor Tissue
Medical Design Briefs
Lighting the Way for Cancer Treatment
Medical Design Briefs INSIDER
MD&M West Keynote: The Science of Predictive Healthcare
Tech Briefs
Drug-Loaded 3D Printed Films
Medical Design Briefs INSIDER
Inhalable Sensors Enable Early Lung Cancer Detection
Tech Briefs
Shape-Changing Microrobots Target Cancer Cells
Tech Briefs
3D Printing Patient-Specific Heart Replicas
Medical Design Briefs
Implantable Device Shrinks Pancreatic Tumors
Medical Design Briefs
Disc-on-a-Chip for Studying Back Pain
Medical Design Briefs
Self-Regulating Nanoparticles Could Treat Cancer
Medical Design Briefs
Drug Testing with Human Body-on-Chip Systems
Medical Design Briefs
CapnoPen Sets New Standard for Chemotherapy
Medical Manufacturing and Machining INSIDER
3D Printing Advances Development of Microfluidic Systems
Medical Design Briefs
Gel-Like, Radioactive Implant Kills Pancreatic Cancer
Tech Briefs
Space Radiation Research Fights Cancer on Earth
Medical Design Briefs
Therapeutic Gel Shows Promise Against Cancerous Tumors
Tech Briefs
Wireless, Battery-Free Micro-Chip Implants
Medical Design Briefs INSIDER
Implantable Uses Light to Treat Cancers