TY - JOUR
T1 - Additive Manufacturing for Personalized Skull Base Reconstruction in Endoscopic Transclival Surgery: A Proof-of-Concept Study
AU - Mattavelli, Davide
AU - Fiorentino, Antonio
AU - Tengattini, Francesco
AU - Colpani, Alessandro
AU - Agnelli, Silvia
AU - Buffoli, Barbara
AU - Ravanelli, Marco
AU - Ferrari, Marco
AU - Schreiber, Alberto
AU - Rampinelli, Vittorio
AU - Taboni, Stefano
AU - Verzeletti, Vincenzo
AU - Deganello, Alberto
AU - Rodella, Luigi Fabrizio
AU - Maroldi, Roberto
AU - Ceretti, Elisabetta
AU - Sartore, Luciana
AU - Piazza, Cesare
AU - Fontanella, Marco M.
AU - Fontanella, Marco Maria
AU - Nicolai, Piero
AU - Doglietto, Francesco
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Background: Endoscopic transnasal transclival intradural surgery is limited by a high postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leak rate. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of three-dimensional printing to create a personalized, rigid scaffold for clival reconstruction. Methods: Two different types of clivectomy were performed in 5 specimens with the aid of neuronavigation, and 11 clival reconstructions were simulated. They were repaired with polylactide, three-dimensional–printed scaffolds that were manually designed in a computer-aided environment based either on the real or on the predicted defect. Scaffolds were printed with a fused filament fabrication technique and different offsets. They were positioned and fixed either following the gasket seal technique or with screws. Postdissection radiological evaluation of scaffold position was performed in all cases. In 3 specimens, the cerebrospinal fluid leak pressure point was measured immediately after reconstruction. Results: The production process took approximately 30 hours. The designed scaffolds were satisfactory when no offset was added. Wings were added during the design to allow for screw positioning, but broke in 30% of cases. Radiological assessment documented maximal accuracy of scaffold positioning when the scaffold was created on the real defect; accuracy was satisfactory when the predicted clivectomy was performed under neuronavigation guidance. The cerebrospinal fluid leak pressure point was significantly higher when the scaffold was fixed with screws compared with the gasket technique. Conclusions: In this preclinical setting, additive manufacturing allows the creation of customized scaffolds that are effective in reconstructing even large and geometrically complex clival defects.
AB - Background: Endoscopic transnasal transclival intradural surgery is limited by a high postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leak rate. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of three-dimensional printing to create a personalized, rigid scaffold for clival reconstruction. Methods: Two different types of clivectomy were performed in 5 specimens with the aid of neuronavigation, and 11 clival reconstructions were simulated. They were repaired with polylactide, three-dimensional–printed scaffolds that were manually designed in a computer-aided environment based either on the real or on the predicted defect. Scaffolds were printed with a fused filament fabrication technique and different offsets. They were positioned and fixed either following the gasket seal technique or with screws. Postdissection radiological evaluation of scaffold position was performed in all cases. In 3 specimens, the cerebrospinal fluid leak pressure point was measured immediately after reconstruction. Results: The production process took approximately 30 hours. The designed scaffolds were satisfactory when no offset was added. Wings were added during the design to allow for screw positioning, but broke in 30% of cases. Radiological assessment documented maximal accuracy of scaffold positioning when the scaffold was created on the real defect; accuracy was satisfactory when the predicted clivectomy was performed under neuronavigation guidance. The cerebrospinal fluid leak pressure point was significantly higher when the scaffold was fixed with screws compared with the gasket technique. Conclusions: In this preclinical setting, additive manufacturing allows the creation of customized scaffolds that are effective in reconstructing even large and geometrically complex clival defects.
KW - 3D printing
KW - Additive manufacturing
KW - Skull base reconstruction
KW - Endoscopic transclival surgery
KW - Personalized bone reconstitution
KW - Cranioplasty
KW - 3D printing
KW - Additive manufacturing
KW - Skull base reconstruction
KW - Endoscopic transclival surgery
KW - Personalized bone reconstitution
KW - Cranioplasty
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/268819
U2 - 10.1016/j.wneu.2021.08.080
DO - 10.1016/j.wneu.2021.08.080
M3 - Article
SN - 1878-8750
VL - 155
SP - 439
EP - 452
JO - World Neurosurgery
JF - World Neurosurgery
ER -