Scientists in China grow new ears for children born with hearing defect

Reconstruction surgery based on host cells and 3-D printed models of the children’s healthy ears, say researchers

PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD:
Scientists in China have grown new ears for five children born with a defect that impacts the shape and function of their ears.

According to the researchers, they have conducted a first-of-its-kind study to cure microtia, in which the external ear is small and not formed properly, using cartilage cells from the ears of children.

New cartilage was based on 3-D printed models of the children’s healthy ears. The researchers then transferred the engineered ears to the children and performed ear reconstruction, as per a study published in the journal EBioMedicine.

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They followed each child for up to two and a half years but said that long-term follow-ups would be required in future as well.


Microtia is a condition which is estimated to occur in about one in every 5,000 live births. Usually, microtia is treated by sculpting an artificial plastic ear to the body and using the patient’s rib cartilage to create an ear, CNN reported.

"This work clearly shows tissue engineering approaches for reconstruction of the ear and other cartilaginous tissues will become a clinical reality very soon," said Lawrence Bonassar, a professor of biomedical engineering and mechanical and aerospace engineering at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, who has studied 3-D-printed ears in microtia patients.

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"The aesthetics of the tissue produced are on par with what can be expected of the best clinical procedures at the present time."

However, the approach has been around as an idea for some time, said Tessa Hadlock, chief of facial plastic and reconstructive surgery at Massachusetts Eye and Ear in Boston.
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