posted on 2019-10-04, 17:35authored byTiziana Fuoco, Astrid Ahlinder, Shubham Jain, Kamal Mustafa, Anna Finne-Wistrand
The
advancement of 3D printing technologies in the fabrication
of degradable scaffolds for tissue engineering includes, from the
standpoint of the polymer chemists, an urgent need to develop new
materials that can be used as ink and are suitable for medical applications.
Here, we demonstrate that a copolymer of ε-caprolactone (CL)
with low amounts of p-dioxanone (DX) (15 mol %) is
a degradable and printable material that suits the requirements of
melt extrusion 3D printing technologies, including negligible degradation
during thermal processing. It is therefore a potential candidate for
soft tissue regeneration. The semicrystalline CL/DX copolymer is processed
at a lower temperature than a commercial polycaprolactone (PCL), shaped
as a filament for melt extrusion 3D printing and as porous and pliable
scaffolds with a gradient design. Scaffolds have Young’s modulus
in the range of 60–80 MPa, values suitable for provision of
structural support for damaged soft tissue such as breast tissue.
SEM and confocal microscope indicate that the CL/DX copolymer scaffolds
support adipose stem cell attachment, spreading, and proliferation.