Published July 31, 2017 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Promises, facts and challenges for graphene in biomedical applications

Description

The graphene family has captured the interest and the imagination of an increasing number of scientists working in different fields, ranging from composites to flexible electronics. In the area of biomedical applications, graphene is especially involved in drug delivery, biosensing and tissue engineering, with strong contributions to the whole nanomedicine area. Besides the interesting results obtained so far and the evident success, there are still many problems to solve, on the way to the manufacturing of biomedical devices, including the lack of standardization in the production of the graphene family members. Control of lateral size, aggregation state (single vs. few layers) and oxidation state (unmodified graphene vs. oxidized graphenes) is essential for the translation of this material into clinical assays. In this Tutorial Review we critically describe the latest developments of the graphene family materials into the biomedical field. We analyze graphene-based devices starting from graphene synthetic strategies, functionalization and processibility protocols up to the final in vitro and in vivo applications. We also address the toxicological impact and the limitations in translating graphene materials into advanced clinical tools. Finally, new trends and guidelines for future developments are presented.

Notes

This work was partly supported by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientique (CNRS) by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) through the LabEx project Chemistry of Complex Systems (ANR-10-LABX-0026_CSC) (to A. B.), by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness MINECO (CTQ2014-53600-R andCTQ2016-76721-R) and by the International Center for Frontier Research in Chemistry (icFRC). M. P. is the recipient of the AXA Chair (2016-2023). The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from EU H2020-Adhoc-2014-20 Graphene Core1 (no. 696656), and from ANR (ANR-15-GRFL-0001-05). M. P. was also supported by Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa program Red (101/16). Dr J. M. Gonzalez-Domınguez greatly acknowledges MINECO for his researcher grant (Formacion Postdoctoral).

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Funding

European Commission
GrapheneCore1 - Graphene-based disruptive technologies 696656