3D-Printed Insoles for People with Type 2 Diabetes: An Italian, Ambulatory Case Report on the Innovative Care Model

Author:

Mancuso Marco1,Bulzomì Rocco2,Mannisi Marco3,Martelli Francesco1ORCID,Giacomozzi Claudia1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Istituto Superiore di Sanità, 00161 Rome, Italy

2. Regional Healthcare Agency ASL ROMA2, 00159 Rome, Italy

3. MEDERE s.r.l., 00118 Rome, Italy

Abstract

3D-printed insoles are increasingly used for the management of foot pathologies, and the recent literature reports on various experimental studies dealing with either whole foot orthoses or pads fabricated through 3D-printing processes. In the case of diabetic foot disease, the main aim is to deliver more effective solutions with respect to the consolidated processes to reduce compressive risk forces at specific plantar foot sites. Clinical studies are, however, still limited, at least in peer-review journals. Additionally, in Italy, the manufacturing process of these medical devices has not been formally integrated yet into the list of care processes approved for reimbursement by the public healthcare service. Within the Italian DIAPASON project (DIAbetic PAtients Safe ambulatiON), a feasibility pilot study has been conducted in the territory on 21 patients with diabetic foot complications to assess the pros and cons of an innovative process. The process, which relies on in-shoe pressure measurements and on a patented 3D modeling and printing procedure, includes the prescription, design, manufacturing and testing of 3D-printed personalized insoles. The process has been tested in an ambulatory setting and showed the potential to be also implemented in community settings. In this paper, we report a case study on a single volunteer, and we describe and comment on how the whole process has been proven safe and suitable for the purpose.

Funder

Italian National Institute of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference35 articles.

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3. International Working Group on Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) (2023, July 02). IWGDF 2019 Guidelines. Available online: www.iwgdfguidelines.org.

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