• May 25, 2022

Bioprinting world companies

Bioprinting world companies

With 119 established bioprinting companies and many entrepreneurs around the world showing interest in the emerging field, it’s just a matter of time before it becomes one of the most sought after technologies. Mapping the companies that make up this industry is a good starting point to understand the bioprinting ecosystem, determine where most companies have established their headquarters and learn more about potential hubs, like the one in San Francisco.

The technology has gained increasing attention due to the ability to control the placement of cells, biomaterials, and molecules for tissue regeneration. Researchers are using bioprinting to create cardiac patches meant to be transplanted directly onto a patient’s heart after a cardiovascular attack, as well as custom printing an implant to precisely fill the space left after the removal of diseased bone. Bioprinting has been used to conduct testing for 3D printing of tailored skin grafts for patients with large wound areas, print muscle, and even for microstereolithography 3D printing to repair damaged nerve connections.

3D bioprinting world map
3D bioprinting world map

Bioprinting companies around the world are continuously innovating in regenerative medicine, drug therapies, tissue engineering, stem cell biology, and biotechnology; getting a lot of attention from a public eager to envision a future with better patient care, and alternatives to organ transplants and customized medical treatments. In an attempt to increase knowledge and research, most bioprinting firms have established partnerships with a number of research organizations, universities, and even government institutions, to jointly create and develop projects that are often published in academic journals. Actually, the literature available on the subject to date is quite vast and growing thanks to the advances in biotechnology, and a great tool for communicating and validating most of this breakthrough knowledge.

Data of 3D bioprinting companies

The data we collected reveals that the United States is the biggest player, with 39 percent of the companies headquartered in 18 states. And although 28% of the total number of companies in the US are located in California, 33 percent have emerged in East Coast states like Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, and Maryland. The European continent is home to 35 percent of the companies, followed by Asia with 17 percent, Latin America (5%) and Oceania (3%). Countries like Great Britain, Germany, and France absorb most of the businesses, which represent a 53% stake out of all the European companies. The leader in Asia is China with three big names, although the country is heavily relying on university research to advance the technology and researchers are using their own in-house designed research, which is probably why we are still waiting to see an expansion of companies.

Researchers, private companies, and universities everywhere are very interested in advancing bioprinting technologies. And although there is a long way to determine how these results will perform in a clinical setting, advances show that the potential in therapeutic and regenerative medicine, surgeries, and overall healthcare are huge. Even 4D bioprinting may have the potential for greater strides in medicine and tissue regeneration since it shows more control over pore size, shape, and interconnectivity. The bioprinting business is giving scientists and medical researchers the tools to prototype, model, build, and solidify living human tissues. From printing machines to bioinks, even scanners, and software to further enhance their work, this interconnected environment has the potential to transform life as we know it.

Pioneer companies such as Organovo, regenHU, CELLINK, and Digilab have been at the forefront of bioprinting for years, creating some of the most innovative machines in the market, which, in the right hands, can make all the difference. Such as the case with Organovo’s bioprinting platform, recently implemented by Leiden University Medical Center scientists to develop stem cell-based bioprinted tissue treatments for kidney disease or Cellink’s Bio X machine which a Florida A&M University professor used to create the first 3D print of human cornea in the United States.

Many of these businesses are focusing on tissue engineering, like Cyfuse Biomedical, Regenovo Biotechnology, Aspect Biosystems, or nScrypt. For instance, researchers using Allevi printers have been automating the creation of tumor models, printing vasculature within 3D gels, and achieving physiological markers unseen before in tissues. This requires a ton of knowledge about the microenvironment of the specific tissues and organs through biomimicry, or by the manufacturing of artificial tissues or organs by reproducing cellular and extracellular components natively present. This know-how is essential for in vitro manufacturing of living tissues with the same size and geometry as native organs.

Many commercially available 3D bioprinters are used in several research areas, like bioengineering, disease modeling, or studies of biomaterials. There are different versions, including syringe based extrusion of hydrogels or bioinks, inkjet printing, laser-induced forward transfer (LIFT), (which is a relatively new printing technique that enables transfer from a thin-film donor material onto a chosen receiver placed nearby), and stereolithography (a form of 3D printing technology used for creating models, prototypes, patterns, and production parts in a layer by layer fashion using photopolymerization).

Bioprinting is leading the way into some of the most advanced research ever done in medicine, in a way becoming a beaming source of hope for hundreds of thousands of people who consider the future of healthcare to be focused on patient-specific treatment and increased life expectancies. Thanks to many of the breakthroughs done at research facilities around the globe and booming interest in the applications of the technology, perhaps in a year, our map will need to be updated and bioprinting companies will have increased significantly. Still, the core of what they are doing has remained the same for the past couple of years, and partnerships continue to emerge among businesses, scientists and researchers, eager to apply their innovative spirit, knowledge of biological sciences, engineering, mathematics and other fields that are contributing to the unstoppable evolution of bioprinting, so that it can eventually transition from the research and development phases to the pre-clinical and trial, getting one step closer to changing people’s lives.

North America

The US and Canada bioprinting market include the following companies:

  1. 3D BioTherapeutics
  2. 3D Biotek
  3. 3D Cultures
  4. Advanced BioMatrix
  5. Advanced Solutions Life Sciences
  6. Aether
  7. Allegro 3D
  8. Allevi
  9. BioLife 4D
  10. Biospherix
  11. Brinter
  12. Cell Applications
  13. CELLINK
  14. Celprogen
  15. DigiLab
  16. Embodi3D
  17. Frontier Bio
  18. Hyrel
  19. International Stem Cell
  20. Koligo Therapeutics Inc.
  21. Lung Biotechnology PBC
  22. Nano 3D Biosciences
  23. Nanofiber Solutions
  24. nScrypt
  25. OrganoFab Technologies
  26. Organovo
  27. PreciseBio
  28. Prellis Biologics
  29. Qrons
  30. Rainbow Biosciences
  31. Ronawk
  32. Rooster Bio
  33. Samsara Sciences
  34. SE3D
  35. STEM Reps
  36. SunP Biotech
  37. Superlative Biosciences Corporation
  38. SuperString
  39. TeVido Biodevices
  40. TheWell Bioscience
  41. Tissue Regeneration Systems
  42. United Therapeutics Corporation
  43. Vivax Bio
  44. Volumetric
  45. Aspect Biosystems
  46. Biomomentum
  47. Dimension Inx
  48. Fluidform
  49. Viscient Biosciences
  50. Humabiologics

Europe

The European bioprinting ecosystem is as follows:

  1. Poietis
  2. regenHu
  3. CTI Biotech
  4. Cellenion
  5. I&L Biosystems SAS
  6. Innov’Gel
  7. Printivo
  8. Cellbricks
  9. GeSim
  10. Black Drop Biodrucker
  11. Medprin Biotech
  12. Greiner Bio-One
  13. Innotere
  14. BiogelX
  15. OxSyBio
  16. ArrayJet
  17. Manchester BIOGEL
  18. 3Dynamics 3D Technologies
  19. Oxford MEStar
  20. ProColl
  21. FabRx
  22. Roslin Cellab (Censo Biotechnologies)
  23. PhosPrint
  24. Ourobotics
  25. Vornia Biomaterials
  26. Prometheus
  27. Twin Helix
  28. Xilloc Medical
  29. Labnatek
  30. 3D Bioprinting Solutions
  31. Regemat 3D (Breca)
  32. Artificial Nature
  33. Ebers
  34. Fluicell AB
  35. Biolamina
  36. CELLnTEC
  37. Morphodyne
  38. Axolotl Biosystems
  39. Centrum Druku 3D
  40. EnvisionTEC
  41. mimiX biotherapeutics

Asia

Asia’s new and booming bioprinting market:

  1. FoldInk Bioprinting
  2. Revotek
  3. MedPrin
  4. Regenovo
  5. Pandorum technologies
  6. Next Big Innovation Labs
  7. IndiBio
  8. BioP India
  9. OrgaNow
  10. 3DPL
  11. CollPlant
  12. Accellta
  13. Next 21 K.K.
  14. Cyfuse
  15. KosmodeHealth
  16. Nephtech 3D
  17. Osteopore
  18. Rokit Healthcare
  19. OmidAfarinan 3D-Bio
  20. CLECELL

Oceania

Oceania’s bioprinting ecosystem:

  1. Inventia Life Sciences
  2. Sonic Regen
  3. MyoFab

Latin America

Latin America’s incipient bioprinting environment:

  1. Tissue Labs
  2. 3D Biotechnologies Solutions
  3. BioPrint 3D
  4. WeBio
  5. Life SI
  6. BioEdTech

Is your company not listed? Email [email protected].
The article is originally published on 3Dprint.com

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