| Literature DB >> 30445005 |
Johanna Aho1, Johan Peter Bøtker1, Natalja Genina1, Magnus Edinger1, Lærke Arnfast1, Jukka Rantanen2.
Abstract
Application of additive manufacturing techniques (3D printing) for mass-customized products has boomed in the recent years. In pharmaceutical industry and research, the interest has grown particularly with the future scenario of more personalized medicinal products. Understanding a broad range of material properties and process behavior of the drug-excipient combinations is necessary for successful 3D printing of dosage forms. This commentary reviews recent 3D-printing studies by fused deposition modeling (FDM) technique in pharmaceutical sciences, extending into the fields of polymer processing and rapid prototyping, where more in-depth studies on the feedstock material properties, modeling, and simulation of the FDM process have been performed. A case study of a model oral dosage form from custom-prepared indomethacin-polycaprolactone feedstock filament was used as an example in the pharmaceutical context. The printability was assessed in the different process steps: preparation of customized filaments for FDM, filament feeding, deposition, and solidification. These were linked with the rheological, thermal, and mechanical properties and their characterization, relevant for understanding the printability of drug products by FDM.Entities:
Keywords: extrusion; mechanical properties; polymer(s); printing (3D); rheology; simulation(s); thermal analysis
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30445005 DOI: 10.1016/j.xphs.2018.11.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Sci ISSN: 0022-3549 Impact factor: 3.534