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News Release

From Class to Clinic

Jason Caffrey ’11, MS ’13, helped make the custom 3-D models printed by his engineering students available to physicians for practice before surgery.

San Diego, Calif., Jan. 11, 2018 -- It’s not every day that an undergrad­uate class influences the way surgeons prepare for operations. But that’s exactly what happened with a fresh­man bioengineering class co-taught by then-PhD student Jason Caffrey ’11, MS ’13‚ and professor Robert Sah.

As part of the Jacobs School of Engineering course, students used CT scans from Â鶹´«Ã½ Health patients who had undergone surgery to print 3-D models of their bone fractures. By the project’s end, Caffrey and Sah wondered if the bone models their students made could be put to use beyond the classroom.

The pair partnered with Dr. Vidyadhar Upasani, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon with Â鶹´«Ã½ and Rady Children’s Hospital, to investigate the potential benefits of flipping their process to produce 3-D models that surgeons could then practice on before an operation.

In an initial study, Upasani operated on 10 patients with slipped capital femoral epiphysis, the most common hip disorder found in children ages nine to 16. For half of the patients, Upasani used a 3-D model to prepare and plan the surgery beforehand. As an additional control group, two other surgeons operated on five patients with the same condition without using models.

The results? Procedures were 38 to 45 minutes shorter for those modeled beforehand, amounting to a 25 percent shorter surgery time. This reduction translates to at least $2,700 in savings per operation, researchers say, and it also reduces the time patients are exposed to radiation from the X-ray fluoroscopy beam that traditionally helps guide the surgeon.

“Being able to practice on these 3-D models is crucial,” says Dr. Upasani. “I’ve seen how beneficial 3-D models are; it’s now hard to plan surgeries without them.” Indeed, the results of the study were so positive that Rady Children’s orthopedics department has acquired its own 3-D printer.

A broader study looking at many institutions and many conditions is currently underway. And Caffrey, the engineering PhD student who organized the class materials and led the model development, is now working on his medical degree at the Â鶹´«Ã½ School of Medicine.

Media Contacts

Ioana Patringenaru
Jacobs School of Engineering
858-822-0899
ipatrin@ucsd.edu