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Translation through collaboration: practice applied in BAMOS project in <i>in vivo</i> testing of innovative osteochondral scaffolds.

Ricardo Donate, Maryam Tamaddon, Viviana P. Ribeiro, Mario Monzón, Joaquím M. Oliveira, Chaozong Liu

2022PubMed14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Osteoarthritis is the most common chronic degenerative joint disease, recognized by the World Health Organization as a public health problem that affects millions of people worldwide. The project Biomaterials and Additive Manufacturing: Osteochondral Scaffold (BAMOS) innovation applied to osteoarthritis, funded under the frame of the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Staff Exchanges (RISE) program, aims to delay or avoid the use of joint replacements by developing novel cost-effective osteochondral scaffold technology for early intervention of osteoarthritis. The multidisciplinary consortium of BAMOS, formed by international leading research centres, collaborates through research and innovation staff exchanges. The project covers all the stages of the development before the clinical trials: design of scaffolds, biomaterials development, processability under additive manufacturing, in vitro test, and in vivo test. This paper reports the translational practice adopted in the project in in vivo assessment of the osteochondral scaffolds developed.

Topics & Concepts

ScaffoldOsteoarthritisMultidisciplinary approachTranslational researchTest (biology)Joint diseaseBusinessEngineering managementMedicineKnowledge managementEngineeringOperations managementManufacturing engineeringBiomedical engineeringComputer sciencePathologyAlternative medicineSocial scienceBiologySociologyPaleontologyOsteoarthritis Treatment and MechanismsBone Tissue Engineering MaterialsOrthopaedic implants and arthroplasty
Translation through collaboration: practice applied in BAMOS project in <i>in vivo</i> testing of innovative osteochondral scaffolds. | Litcius