RT info:eu-repo/semantics/article T1 Clinical applications of “in-hospital” 3D printing in hip surgery: a systematic narrative review A1 Aguado Maestro, Ignacio A1 Simón Pérez, Clarisa A1 García Alonso, Manuel Francisco A1 Ailagas de las Heras, Juan José A1 Paredes Herrero, Elena K1 Three-dimensional printing K1 Biomedical materials - Technological innovations K1 Impresión tridimensional K1 Imágenes tridimensionales K1 Hip joint - Surgery K1 Cadera - Cirugía K1 Orthopedic surgery K1 Orthopedics K1 Traumatology K1 Surgery K1 Public health K1 Clinical Medicine K1 Public health K1 3213.10 Cirugía Ortopédica K1 3213.15 Traumatología K1 3201 Ciencias Clínicas K1 3212 Salud Publica AB Introduction: Interest in 3D printing for orthopedic surgery has been increasing since its progressive adoption in most of the hospitals around the world. The aim of the study is to describe all the current applications of 3D printing in patients undergoing hip surgery of any type at the present time. Materials and Methods: We conducted a systematic narrative review of publications indexed in MedLine through the search engine PubMed, with the following parameters: 3D printing AND (orthopedics OR traumatology) NOT tissue engineering NOT scaffold NOT in vitro and deadline 31 July 2023. After reading the abstracts of the articles, papers were selected according to the following criteria: full text in English or Spanish and content related to hip surgery. Those publications involving experimental studies (in vitro or with anatomical specimens) or 3D printing outside of hospital facilities as well as 3D-printed commercial implants were excluded. Results are presented as a reference guide classified by disease, including the used software and the steps required for the development of the idea. Results: We found a total of 27 indications for in-house 3D printing for hip surgery, which are described in the article. Conclusions: There are many surgical applications of 3D printing in hip surgery, most of them based on CT images. Most of the publications lack evidence, and further randomized studies should be encouraged to assess the advantages of these indications. PB MDPI SN 2077-0383 YR 2024 FD 2024 LK https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/70046 UL https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/70046 LA eng NO Journal of Clinical Medicine, 2024, Vol. 13, Nº. 2, 599 NO Producción Científica DS UVaDOC RD 28-nov-2024