Carbon works with Resolution Medical to 3D print a medical device for the testing of COVID-19

To help increase COVID-19 testing capacity, Resolution Medical, an FDA registered, in vitro diagnostic and medical device manufacturer, announced the launch of The Resolution Medical Lattice Swab, crafted with Carbon Technology. Resolution Medical has already sent the new 3D printed nasopharyngeal swabs for COVID-19 testing to healthcare organizations and is able to provide swabs to others in the United States who order on its website. Manufactured using Carbon Digital Light SynthesisTM (DLS) technology and KeySplint Soft Clear material for Carbon printers from Keystone Industries, the Lattice Swab is classified by the FDA as a Class I 510(k) Exempt in vitro diagnostic medical device.

Patient testing swabs are among the critical medical supplies needed by healthcare providers for COVID-19 testing. Expanding the availability of testing supplies, and thus testing frequency, is a vital part of the timely identification of COVID-19 patients and helping to curb the pandemic’s spread. The new Resolution Medical Lattice Swab exhibits a conformal lattice design made with Carbon’s Lattice Engine software. The hollow structure of the lattice is designed for specimen collection efficiency, with a geometry that is also flexible to promote functionality and comfort for patients. The product is undergoing clinical evaluation by clinicians at multiple institutions, including Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), a teaching hospital affiliated with Harvard Medical School, and Stanford Medicine.

“We are proud to be collaborating with digital manufacturing company, Carbon, to produce the Lattice Swab,” said Shawn Patterson, Founder and President of Resolution Medical. “We have worked together urgently to get this product into the hands of healthcare workers to help address immediate needs for increased COVID-19 testing. At scale, we plan to supply over 1 million swabs per week.”

To produce the Lattice Swab, Resolution Medical works with Carbon’s network of dental labs and production partners, as well as its internal printing team, who use Carbon M2 printers and Keystone Industries’ KeySplint Soft Clear material, indicated for the fabrication of orthodontic and dental appliances such as mouthguards, night guards, and snoring appliances in the US, Canada, EU, Australia, and New Zealand. The swabs, which are biocompatible and autoclavable, are currently printed hundreds at a time with a unique serialization present on each strip to facilitate traceability.

“Triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic, Carbon’s engineers and material scientists quickly sprung to action to identify the KeySplint Soft Clear material as having the right balance of properties to make a soft, flexible swab with appropriate strength that could be printed with precision using the Carbon M2 at 75 micron pixels,” said Dr. Joseph DeSimone, Co-Founder and Executive Chairman at Carbon. “Resolution Medical, our production partner since 2018, has been amazing in leading the effort to launch the product.”

In developing, testing, and refining the Lattice Swabs, the team collaborated with a coalition of researchers led by clinical pathologist Ramy Arnaout, MD, PhD, associate director of the clinical microbiology laboratories at BIDMC and assistant professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School. His group performed clinical assessments of the swabs based on design, materials testing, usability, and a variety of human factors; collection sufficiency of biological samples; and PCR compatibility using their in-house commercial COVID-19 test. Leading an open and public process, Dr. Arnaout’s group tested and provided feedback on over 160 designs, materials, and prototypes from over a dozen manufacturers, resulting in a decision to launch an ongoing clinical trial of the Lattice Swabs.

“Resolving the national shortage of nasopharyngeal testing swabs is critical to the global fight against COVID-19,” Dr. Arnaout said. “We have brought together a multi-disciplinary team of scientists, academics, and industry partners in a shared effort to resolve this crisis and have begun a clinical trial of Lattice Swabs and other prototypes here at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.”

Carbon and Resolution Medical also collaborated with Kit Parker, PhD, a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army Reserve and a professor of bioengineering and applied physics at Harvard University, who played a key role in convening and coordinating efforts, as well as assessing the mechanical properties of various swabs submitted by several providers.

Additionally, Carbon and Resolution Medical have been working with a team of faculty and laboratory and nursing staff at Stanford Medicine, including Ryan Van Wert, MD, clinical assistant professor of medicine; Christina Kong, MD, medical director of the Pathology and Clinical Laboratory; and Jennifer Fralick, administrative director of Laboratory Services. The 3D Printing for COVID-19 Taskforce at Stanford Medicine has been led by Sridhar Seshadri, PhD, Chief Administrative Officer, Destination Service Lines.

 

Resolution Medical
www.resolutionmedical.com/latticeswabs

Carbon
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