3D‐Printed Gastric Resident Electronics

Yong Lin Kong(University of Utah), Xingyu Zou(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Caitlin A. McCandler(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Ameya R. Kirtane(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Shen Ning(Boston University), Jianlin Zhou(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Abubakar Abid(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Mousa Jafari(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Jaimie Rogner(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Daniel Minahan(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Joy Collins(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Shane McDonnell(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Cody Cleveland(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Taylor Bensel(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Siid Tamang(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Graham Arrick(Draper Laboratory), Alla Gimbel(Draper Laboratory), Tiffany Hua(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Udayan Ghosh(University of Utah), Vance Soares(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Nancy M. Wang(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Aniket Wahane(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Alison Hayward(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Shiyi Zhang(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Brian R. Smith(Draper Laboratory), Róbert Langer(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Giovanni Traverso(Brigham and Women's Hospital)
Advanced Materials Technologies
December 13, 2018
Cited by 101Open Access
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Abstract

Long-term implantation of biomedical electronics into the human body enables advanced diagnostic and therapeutic functionalities. However, most long-term resident electronics devices require invasive procedures for implantation as well as a specialized receiver for communication. Here, a gastric resident electronic (GRE) system that leverages the anatomical space offered by the gastric environment to enable residence of an orally delivered platform of such devices within the human body is presented. The GRE is capable of directly interfacing with portable consumer personal electronics through Bluetooth, a widely adopted wireless protocol. In contrast to the passive day-long gastric residence achieved with prior ingestible electronics, advancement in multimaterial prototyping enables the GRE to reside in the hostile gastric environment for a maximum of 36 d and maintain ≈15 d of wireless electronics communications as evidenced by the studies in a porcine model. Indeed, the synergistic integration of reconfigurable gastric-residence structure, drug release modules, and wireless electronics could ultimately enable the next-generation remote diagnostic and automated therapeutic strategies.


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