商业化
报销
限制
工程伦理学
多样性(控制论)
风险分析(工程)
过程(计算)
医学
新兴技术
业务
材料科学
医疗保健
纳米技术
工程类
营销
政治学
计算机科学
机械工程
人工智能
法学
操作系统
作者
David W. Grainger,Henny C. van der Mei,Paul C. Jutte,J.J.A.M. van den Dungen,Marcus J. Schultz,Bernard F. A. M. van der Laan,Sebastian A. J. Zaat,Henk J. Busscher
出处
期刊:Biomaterials
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2013-09-11
卷期号:34 (37): 9237-9243
被引量:106
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.biomaterials.2013.08.043
摘要
Biomaterials-associated infection incidence represents an increasing clinical challenge as more people gain access to medical device technologies worldwide and microbial resistance to current approaches mounts. Few reported antimicrobial approaches to implanted biomaterials ever get commercialized for physician use and patient benefit. This is not for lack of ideas since many thousands of claims to new approaches to antimicrobial efficacy are reported. Lack of translation of reported ideas into medical products approved for use, results from conflicting goals and purposes between the various participants involved in conception, validation, development, commercialization, safety and regulatory oversight, insurance reimbursement, and legal aspects of medical device innovation. The scientific causes, problems and impressive costs of the limiting clinical options for combating biomaterials-associated infection are well recognized. Demands for improved antimicrobial technologies constantly appear. Yet, the actual human, ethical and social costs and consequences of their occurrence are less articulated. Here, we describe several clinical cases of biomaterials-associated infections to illustrate the often-missing human elements of these infections. We identify the current societal forces at play in translating antimicrobial research concepts into clinical implant use and their often-orthogonal constituencies, missions and policies. We assert that in the current complex environment between researchers, funding agencies, physicians, patients, providers, producers, payers, regulatory agencies and litigators, opportunities for translatable successes are minimized under the various risks assumed in the translation process. This argues for an alternative approach to more effectively introduce new biomaterials and device technologies that can address the clinical issues by providing patients and medical practitioners new options for desperate clinical conditions ineffectively addressed by biomedical innovation.
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