3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine

Background: Three-dimensional (3D) printing fabricates a structure by depositing materials layer-by-layer to form an object. Drug personalization receives attention due to problems arising from drug treatments such as undesirable side effects and ineffective drug therapy among pediatric and ge...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Haris @ Harith, Muhammad Salahuddin, Mohd Azlan, Nur Hakimah, Taher, Muhammad, Mohd Rus, Shaiqah, Chatterjee, Bappaditya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association of Pharmaceutical Teachers of India (APTI) 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/84266/1/IndJPhaEdRes-54-3s-s411.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/84266/
http://ijper.org/article/1257
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.iium.irep.84266
record_format dspace
spelling my.iium.irep.842662020-11-05T07:42:16Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/84266/ 3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine Haris @ Harith, Muhammad Salahuddin Mohd Azlan, Nur Hakimah Taher, Muhammad Mohd Rus, Shaiqah Chatterjee, Bappaditya RS Pharmacy and materia medica Background: Three-dimensional (3D) printing fabricates a structure by depositing materials layer-by-layer to form an object. Drug personalization receives attention due to problems arising from drug treatments such as undesirable side effects and ineffective drug therapy among pediatric and geriatric patients. Hypothesis: Conventional dosage form faces issues such as non-adherence to medication, ineffective treatment due to non-preferable dosage form and non-optimized drug release. Personalized 3D printing drugs offer personalized drug dosing, novel drug release profile and unique dosage form production. Results and Conclusion: Therefore, this review discussed the benefits of 3D-printed drugs and an overview of the standard 3D printer technology used in pharmaceuticals. This article aimed to review the current application of 3D-printed drugs in the personalization of drug dosing, the variation of drug release profile and fabrication of unique drug dosage form. Further research and experimentation of 3D-printed drugs are recommended as they will offer a significant aid in the customization of medicine. The potential utilization of 3D-printed drugs in optimizing effective and safe medication is undeniable. However, there are some challenges needed to be overcome, such as compatibility between chosen methods with materials used, difficulty to scale-up production, regulatory requirement as well as protection of individual rights issues. Association of Pharmaceutical Teachers of India (APTI) 2020-10 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/84266/1/IndJPhaEdRes-54-3s-s411.pdf Haris @ Harith, Muhammad Salahuddin and Mohd Azlan, Nur Hakimah and Taher, Muhammad and Mohd Rus, Shaiqah and Chatterjee, Bappaditya (2020) 3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine. Indian Journal of Pharmaceutical Education and Research, 54 (3s). S411-S422. ISSN 0019-5464 (In Press) http://ijper.org/article/1257 10.5530/ijper.54.3s.139
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic RS Pharmacy and materia medica
spellingShingle RS Pharmacy and materia medica
Haris @ Harith, Muhammad Salahuddin
Mohd Azlan, Nur Hakimah
Taher, Muhammad
Mohd Rus, Shaiqah
Chatterjee, Bappaditya
3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine
description Background: Three-dimensional (3D) printing fabricates a structure by depositing materials layer-by-layer to form an object. Drug personalization receives attention due to problems arising from drug treatments such as undesirable side effects and ineffective drug therapy among pediatric and geriatric patients. Hypothesis: Conventional dosage form faces issues such as non-adherence to medication, ineffective treatment due to non-preferable dosage form and non-optimized drug release. Personalized 3D printing drugs offer personalized drug dosing, novel drug release profile and unique dosage form production. Results and Conclusion: Therefore, this review discussed the benefits of 3D-printed drugs and an overview of the standard 3D printer technology used in pharmaceuticals. This article aimed to review the current application of 3D-printed drugs in the personalization of drug dosing, the variation of drug release profile and fabrication of unique drug dosage form. Further research and experimentation of 3D-printed drugs are recommended as they will offer a significant aid in the customization of medicine. The potential utilization of 3D-printed drugs in optimizing effective and safe medication is undeniable. However, there are some challenges needed to be overcome, such as compatibility between chosen methods with materials used, difficulty to scale-up production, regulatory requirement as well as protection of individual rights issues.
format Article
author Haris @ Harith, Muhammad Salahuddin
Mohd Azlan, Nur Hakimah
Taher, Muhammad
Mohd Rus, Shaiqah
Chatterjee, Bappaditya
author_facet Haris @ Harith, Muhammad Salahuddin
Mohd Azlan, Nur Hakimah
Taher, Muhammad
Mohd Rus, Shaiqah
Chatterjee, Bappaditya
author_sort Haris @ Harith, Muhammad Salahuddin
title 3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine
title_short 3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine
title_full 3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine
title_fullStr 3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine
title_full_unstemmed 3D-printed drugs: A fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine
title_sort 3d-printed drugs: a fabrication of pharmaceuticals towards personalized medicine
publisher Association of Pharmaceutical Teachers of India (APTI)
publishDate 2020
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/84266/1/IndJPhaEdRes-54-3s-s411.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/84266/
http://ijper.org/article/1257
_version_ 1683230376456093696
score 13.2014675