Chinese Man With Rare Form of Cancer Receives First 3D Printed Sacrum Bone in Breakthrough Surgery

RAPID

Share this Article

sacrum23D printing has played a huge role in making the impossible possible. This certainly has pertained to the medical field quite a lot as of late, as doctors from around the world are finally realizing the benefits that the technology can provide, both inside and outside the operating room. For one man in China, 3D printing literally helped save his life.

Wang Li of Guangxi, China was diagnosed with a very rare form of cancer, called Sacral Chordoma. Chordoma is so rare that only about 1 in 1,000,000 people throughout the world are diagnosed with it. Usually effecting the bones of the skull and base of the spine, Li’s tumors attacked his sacrum.

For those unaware, the sacrum is a triangular bone located at the base of the spine and the upper part of the pelvic cavity. Consisting of five fused vertebrae, the area is extremely important to human movement. After having the tumor removed, Li had experienced a recurrence because the cells were so deeply rooted into his sacrum. Along with the cancer coming back, he also experienced much pain and discomfort, including pain in his bowels, dysfunction of his bladder, and several other problems. After multiple treatments had failed, he decided to travel to Beijing and take a visit to the Peking University People’s Hospital.

sacrum3

Once there, Professor Guo Wei, and his team of doctors and surgeons, carried out a full analysis of Li, according to clinical data that they had retrieved. After much discussion, the team decided that the best course of action was a complete posterior sacral resection (removal). At the same time though, removing Li’s sacrum would come with complications of its own.

The sacrum is an important bone structure connected to the torso and limbs,” Professor Guo Wei explained. “A full sacrum bone defect after resection will cause the loss of the connection between the torso and pelvis. After surgery, this leaves the patients unable to stand or walk, without the ability to take care of themselves. Sacrum bone tumor resection reconstruction is a major international academic difficulty. “

Wei, however, decided to try something new when it comes to sacral resection, in that he would, for the first time, use 3D printing technology to create a sacral prosthesis that would in effect take the place of Li’s removed sacrum. Using Li’s anatomy, they were able to construct a 3D model of the bone replacement. Once they had the model rendered correctly, they 3D printed it out of titanium, ensuring that the material was porous in structure to allow for Li’s normal bone to grow into and around it. This would ultimately allow the spine, pelvis and sacrum to all come together as one, like it was prior to the resection.

sacrum5

After a 4-hour surgery, surgeons were able to completely remove the tumors, place and insert the 3D printed sacrum, and tie up all the loose ends. The surgery was deemed successful, and Li is expected to make a full recovery.

Professor Wei believes that 3D printing has tremendous potential within medicine, and it will continue to allow for various forms of reconstructive surgery which were not possible just a few years ago. At the same time, it has been proven to show that in instances such as Li’s, when large portions of bone are required to be removed due to cancer, 3D printing can create replacements that are just as strong and fit just as well as the original bones.

sacrum1

Professor Wei

What do you think about this incredible story? Will 3D printing ultimately end up in every hospital in the world? Discuss in the 3D Printed Sacrum forum thread on 3DPB.com.

Share this Article


Recent News

BMF Releases Dual-Resolution System for Micro and Macro 3D Printing

Bringing a Business Model from Prototype to Scale: Makelab CEO Christina Perla Discusses the Company’s Innovative Growth Strategy



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

3D Printing Webinar and Event Roundup: May 5, 2024

We’ve got a busy week of 3D printing events ahead of us, in Texas, Florida, Washington, D.C., Shanghai, and more. Webinar offerings will cover medical models, PolyJet 3D printing, additive...

High Stakes, High Speed: KVG Acquires 15 Nexa3D HSE 3D Printers to Boost Military Tech

As 3D printing increasingly intersects with defense and military logistics, a new partnership between Nexa3D and mission support logistics firm KVG stresses the growing importance of this technology in strategic...

Construction 3D Printing CEO Reflects on Being Female in Construction

Natalie Wadley, CEO of ChangeMaker3D, could hear the words of her daughter sitting next to her resounding in her head. “Mum, MUM, you’ve won!” Wadley had just won the prestigious...

3D Printing News Briefs, February 17, 2024: Shot Blasting, Service Bureaus, & More

In today’s 3D Printing News Briefs, we’re starting out with post-processing, as SKZ Würzburg is using a shot blast system from AM Solutions for its research. Moving on to business,...