Definitions of Biomaterials for the Twenty-First Century is a review of key, critical biomaterial terms and definitions endorsed by the International Union of Societies for Biomaterials Science and Engineering. The topics and definitions discussed include those in general biomaterials and applications, biocompatibility, implantable and interventional devices, drug delivery systems, regenerative medicine and emerging biomaterials. The book reviews the discussion of these terms by leaders in the global biomaterials community and summarizes the agreed upon definitions.
Definitions of Biomaterials for the Twenty-First Century is a review of key, critical biomaterial terms and definitions endorsed by the International Union of Societies for Biomaterials Science and Engineering. The topics and definitions discussed include those in general biomaterials and applications, biocompatibility, implantable and interventional devices, drug delivery systems, regenerative medicine and emerging biomaterials. The book reviews the discussion of these terms by leaders in the global biomaterials community and summarizes the agreed upon definitions.
I Introduction; David Williams
(a) Background
(b) Logistics of Consensus Conference
(c) Structure of Definitions
(d) Introductory General Definitions
(e) Terms to be Discussed
II Session One: General Biomaterials
(a) Plenary Presentation: David Williams
(b) Moderator’s Comments: Kai Zhang
(c) Reporter’s Comments: Carl Simon
(d) Votes on Definitions
III Session Two: Biocompatibility
(a) Plenary Presentation: James Anderson
(b) Moderator’s Comments: James Kirkpatrick
(c) Reporter’s Comments: Jeremy Gilbert
(d) Votes on Definitions
IV Session Three: Implantable and Interventional Devices
(a) Plenary Presentation: Jiang Chang
(b) Moderator’s Comments: Art Coury
(c) Reporter’s Comments: Keith McLean
(d) Votes on Definitions
V Session Four: Drugs and Genes
(a) Plenary Presentation: Nicholas Peppas
(b) Moderator’ Comments: Kazunori Kataoka
(c) Reporter’s Comments: Maria Vicent
(d) Votes on Definitions
VI Session Five: Regenerative Medicine
(a) Plenary Presentation: William Wagner
(b) Moderator’ comments: Cato Laurencin
(c) Reporter’ comments: Helen Lu
(d) Votes on Definitions
VII Session Six: Emerging Biomaterials and Technologies
(a) Plenary Presentation: Kristi Anseth
(b) Moderator’s Comments: Kam Leong
(c) Reporter’s comments: Jiandong Ding
(d) Votes on Definitions
VIII Review and Summary of Definitions that Achieved Consensus
Annex A Delegates
Annex B Summary of Consensus Definitions at Chester, 1986
Annex C Preliminary List of Terms to be Discussed and Possible
Definitions
Xingdong Zhang is a professor of Sichuan University, and President
of the International Union of Societies for Biomaterials Science
and Engineering (IUSBSE), and Honorary President of the Chinese
Society for Biomaterials (CSBM). His research focuses on
calcium-phosphate biomaterials and implantable medical devices for
musculoskeletal system. In 1983, he was the first in China to
research and develop hydroxyapatite (HA) ceramics and related
synthetic bone grafts. In 1987, he was the first in China to design
and develop titanium dental implants and total hip replacements
(THR) with plasma-sprayed hydroxyapatite (HA) coatings. He was one
of the pioneers in the world to find and confirm that porous
calcium phosphates ceramics can induce bone formation in 1991. To
date, three companies founded by him have obtained six Registration
Certificates for Medical Devices issued by the China Food and Drug
Administration. 20 series of products with over 200 different
specifications have been commercialized and applied to dozens of
thousand cases in near 1000 Chinese hospitals. Prof. Zhang has made
significant contributions to the development of biomaterials
science and engineering in China and the world. As one of the major
participants, he has drawn up a series of National Strategic Plans
for biomaterials development in China since the end of last
century. He founded the first national center for biomaterials
research in China in 2000—the National Engineering Research Center
for Biomaterials. Prof. Zhang served as an Observer (1992-1996) of
the ILC and a Delegate (1996-2008) of the IUSBSE. He has initiated
and organized a series of bilateral and multilateral biomaterials
meetings at home and abroad. Especially, as President of the 9th
World biomaterials Congress, he successfully organized a superb
congress which was highly regarded at home and abroad. Prof. Zhang
has numerous honors and awards. He is a Member of the Chinese
Academy of Engineering, Foreign Member of the National Academy of
Engineering, Fellow of the IUSBSE and the American Institute of
Medical and Biological Engineering, winner of National Natural
Science Award of China (Second Prize), National Science and
Technology Progress Award of China (Second Prize), Sharma Award
from the Society for Biomaterials and Artificial Organs (India),
Hashiguchi Lungi Fund Award (Japan), and Outstand Contribution
Award (CSBM), and the 2015 Clemson Award for Applied Research (US).
At the time Professor Williams started his career in biomaterials
science, in 1967, there were, in fact, very few materials in
clinical use. He worked alongside some of the early pioneers in
implant surgery, including Charnley, the inventor of total hip
replacement, and quickly realized that too little was known about
the host response to implanted biomaterials for there to be any
reasonable hope of routine success. He wrote the first monograph on
this subject in 1973 in order to place the existing scientific
knowledge into the perspective of the amazing potential that
reconstructive surgery offered. He then set out to develop in vitro
and in vivo systems to explore the subject of biocompatibility,
encompassing phenomena such as polymer biodegradation,
physiological metallic corrosion, the role of the immune response
in the biocompatibility of synthetic biomaterials and
mechanobiology. Crucially, he developed systems for the
quantification of the host response to biomaterials, using, for the
first time, the combination of immunohistochemistry and image
analysis. He went on to study, and introduce into clinical
practice, some high performance engineering biomaterials, including
new titanium alloys, silverbased products, highly biostable
polyurethanes, biodegradable polymers such as the PHB family and
thermoplastics such as PEEK. He went on, through directing two of
the major collaborative programs in tissue engineering in Europe to
identify the essential specification parameters for tissue
engineering biomaterials. He has received the major awards of all
biomaterials-based societies, and is an academician in the UK,
being elected as a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in
1999. He is one of the very few foreign members of the American
Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering. In 2012 he
received the Gold Medal of the Acta Biomaterialia Group, the most
prestigious international honor in biomaterials science, being only
the fifth person ever to receive this award. He was also elected as
a Founding Fellow of the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative
Society International, as one of 24 global leaders in this
field.
Professor Williams remained research active at the University of
Liverpool until he left the UK in 2007 and now has high-level
positions in several countries. His main location is at the Wake
Forest Institute of Regenerative Medicine in North Carolina, USA,
where he is Professor of Biomaterials and Director of International
Affairs. During the last decade he has worked extensively on issues
of balancing risk and innovation in medical technology, and has
written several Opinion Papers on which new European legislation
has been based, including public health issues concerned with
latex, PVC, dental amalgams and so on. In recent years he has
devoted more time and energy to the development of new research
strategies and the promotion of biomaterials science and
regenerative medicine, and has advised governments and institutions
around the world on these matters. His recent publications on the
nature of biomaterials and the mechanisms of biocompatibility are
already seen as seminal works in the evolution of biomaterials
science. His primary focus has been as Editor-in-Chief on the
journal Biomaterials, which he has now taken to the top position in
the world’s journals in this area, and indeed into the top 100 of
all of the world’s scientific journals. He travels extensively,
especially in Asia, to promote excellence in scientific research
and writing. In the pursuit of the globalization of excellence in
biomaterials research, he has been elected to the position of
President-elect of TERMIS, the international society concerned with
regenerative medicine, and is actively promoting the application of
biomaterials science in Asia and Africa.
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