Three‐dimensional (3D) printing or additive manufacturing is a new technology that has seen rapid development in recent years with decreasing costs. 3D printing allows the creation of customised, finely detailed constructs. Technological improvements, increased printer availability, decreasing costs, improved cell culture techniques, and biomaterials have enabled complex, novel and individualised medical treatments to be developed. Although the long‐term goal of printing biocompatible organs has not yet been achieved, major advances have been made utilising 3D printing in biomedical engineering. In this literature review, we discuss the role of 3D printing in relation to urological surgery. We highlight the common printing methods employed and show examples of clinical urological uses. Currently, 3D printing can be used in urology for education of trainees and patients, surgical planning, creation of urological equipment, and bioprinting. In this review, we summarise the current applications of 3D‐printing technology in these areas of urology.
The Community for Open Antimicrobial Drug Discovery (CO-ADD) is a not-for-profit, collaborative approach to discovering new antibiotics. We access novel chemical diversity from academic synthetic chemists, who collectively possess millions of untested compounds with chemical diversity that lie outside commercial collections. We perform high-throughput antimicrobial screening of pure compounds derived from both synthetic and natural sources free of charge. The resulting data can be used by participants for publication, patenting and development purposes, and is fed back into the research community through an open-access database after a 2-year period during which information is kept confidential to the provider. CO-ADD is fundamentally asking two questions: can the community work together to address the global threat of antimicrobial resistance; and are there as yet undiscovered, novel antimicrobial compounds already present within our diverse global chemistry community?
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