For the first time, 3D printed cornea returns sight.

For the first time, 3D printed cornea returns sight.




It was something considered distant, almost experimental, but now there is a concrete record, a blind patient could see again after receiving a completely 3D printed cornea, built not from donated tissue, but cultured in a laboratory with live human corneal cells.


The procedure occurred at the Rambam Ophthalmological Institute the Rambam Ophthalmological Institute in Haifa in collaboration with the company Precise Bio specialized in biomanufacturing, the intervention marks the first time that an implant of this type is transplanted into a human being with functional recovery of vision, creating a new reference for regenerative medicine.




The printed cornea arises as an answer to a silent problem. Injuries, infections and genetic disorders destroy the transparency of this dental tissue, leaving millions of people without risk of blindness. Traditional transplants have a high success rate of close to 97%, but it depends on donors and infrastructure capable of providing tissue quickly; in some countries this takes a few days, in others it takes years.


The innovation here is in scale, from a single cornea from a healthy donor, the researchers managed to grow enough material for around 300 implants, according to Precise Bio, the platform could in the future be adapted to produce heart tissue, liver and kidney cells, although each application requires rigorous validation before reaching patients.


The restoration of vision, in this first case, is not just a clinical milestone. the demonstration that printed organs can leave the conceptual phase and enter the therapeutic field in the not too distant future.



Sorry for my Ingles, it's not my main language. The images were taken from the sources used or were created with artificial intelligence