Publications by authors named "Bernard Rolfe"

Cancer is a critical cause of global human death. Not only are complex approaches to cancer prognosis, accurate diagnosis, and efficient therapeutics concerned, but post-treatments like postsurgical or chemotherapeutical effects are also followed up. The four-dimensional (4D) printing technique has gained attention for its potential applications in cancer therapeutics.

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The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a strong barrier against the entrance of drugs, which has made brain cancer treatment a major challenge. We have previously shown that targeting transferrin receptors using aptamers increased brain drug delivery. To get a better understanding of this phenomenon, in the present article, a mathematical model based on the finite element method was developed accounting for the fluid flow and mass transport of the aptamer molecule inside an 8 µm capillary vessel across a 14 µm blood-brain barrier domain.

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Immobilization devices are used to obtain reproducible patient setup during radiotherapy treatment, improving accuracy, and reducing damage to surrounding healthy tissue. Additive manufacturing is emerging as a viable method for manufacturing and personalizing such devices. The goal of this study was to investigate the dosimetric and mechanical properties of a recent additive technology called multi-jet fusion (MJF) for radiotherapy applications, including the ability for this process to produce full color parts.

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Background And Purpose: Radiotherapy is one of the most effective cancer treatment techniques, however, delivering the optimal radiation dosage is challenging due to movements of the patient during treatment. Immobilisation devices are typically used to minimise motion. This paper reviews published research investigating the use of 3D printing (additive manufacturing) to produce patient-specific immobilisation devices, and compares these to traditional devices.

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3D printing provides new opportunities to create devices used during radiotherapy treatments, yet little is known about the effect process parameters play on the proposed devices. This study investigates the combined influence of infill pattern, infill density and print orientation on surface dose, as well as on the mechanical properties of 3D printed samples, identifying the optimal infill patterns for use in radiotherapy devices including immobilisation. Fused deposition modelling (FDM) was used to produce sixty samples in two orientations for surface dose measurement, utilising ten different infill patterns.

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