Publicacións en colaboración con investigadores/as de University College London (148)

2025

  1. 3D PRINTING: THE FUTURE OF PERSONALISED MEDICINES

    ONdrugDelivery, Vol. 2025, Núm. 173, pp. 22-27

  2. 3D printed hydroxyurea for pediatric use: toward personalized formulations and reduced exposure risk

    International Journal of Pharmaceutics, Vol. 686

  3. 3D printing of dose-flexible crystalline solid dispersion tablets suitable for preclinical and first-in-human studies

    Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vol. 114, Núm. 10

  4. 3D printing personalized medications in a hospital: Rapid and non-destructive dose verification of printed medicines enabled by miniaturised spectroscopy

    Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vol. 114, Núm. 9

  5. 3D-Printed core-shell tablet for effective oral delivery of AT-MSC secretome in inflammatory bowel disease therapy

    Drug Delivery and Translational Research

  6. A framework for conducting clinical trials involving 3D printing of medicines at the point-of-care

    Drug Delivery and Translational Research, Vol. 15, Núm. 9, pp. 3078-3097

  7. Advancing medication compounding: Use of a pharmaceutical 3D printer to auto-fill minoxidil capsules for dispensing to patients in a community pharmacy

    International Journal of Pharmaceutics, Vol. 671

  8. Clinical implementation of a paediatric 3D-printed combination of Sulfamethoxazole and Trimethoprim

    International Journal of Pharmaceutics, Vol. 676

  9. Enabling the personalisation of 3D printed extended-release oral drug products: Transmission Raman spectroscopy as a rapid quality control tool

    European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vol. 215

  10. Entering New Domains for 3D Printing of Drug Products

    Pharmaceutical Technology

  11. Expediting 3D printed medication development using vacuum compression moulding

    Journal of Controlled Release, Vol. 383

  12. Fabrication of 3D printed mutable drug delivery devices: a comparative study of volumetric and digital light processing printing

    Drug Delivery and Translational Research, Vol. 15, Núm. 5, pp. 1595-1608

  13. Harnessing handheld inkjet printing technology for rapid and decentralised fabrication of drug-loaded hydroxypropyl cellulose buccal films

    Carbohydrate Polymer Technologies and Applications, Vol. 9

  14. Influence of filament loading technique on surrogate active pharmaceutical ingredient particle emissions during material extrusion 3D printing of tablets

    International Journal of Pharmaceutics, Vol. 682

  15. Inkjet printing of pharmaceutical tattoos for the direct deposition of oestradiol onto skin in turner syndrome

    European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, Vol. 214