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The Future of 3D Printing in Medical Device Manufacturing

Trends, Use Cases and What OEMs Should Know


Effy Shafner

Effy Shafner

Content Marketing Writer

In the race to deliver safe, effective, and cost-efficient medical devices, original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) are under increasing pressure. Rising development costs, evolving regulatory demands, and supply chain vulnerabilities are challenging traditional manufacturing workflows. Manufacturers are navigating economic uncertainty and shifting global trade dynamics, which impact both material costs and production timelines. At the same time, clinicians and end users are demanding greater customization and faster innovation.

To meet these challenges, 3D printing has become a powerful tool across the entire product development lifecycle. What was once used primarily for early-stage prototyping has now become a production-ready solution that allows medical device manufacturers to streamline development, reduce costs, and respond quickly to clinical needs, all while maintaining the precision and performance required for regulatory success. As a result, 3D printing and prototyping medical devices is no longer a niche capability, but a strategic advantage in modern product development.

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In this post, we’ll explore where the industry is headed, how forward-thinking medical device OEMs are already using 3D printing in real-world applications, and why adopting additive workflows is critical to staying competitive.

If you're ready to explore how 3D printing can optimize every stage of the device lifecycle, don’t miss our Medical Device Lifecycle Guide - a comprehensive resource for OEMs.

OEM Case Studies: 3D Printing Success Stories

Additive manufacturing is already delivering measurable results for leading medical device manufacturers like Medtronic and EndoCure. Real-world examples show how Stratasys customers are using 3D printing to solve complex development challenges and gain a competitive edge, whether it’s accelerating iteration, reducing reliance on external vendors, or enabling clinician-driven design feedback.  

Medtronic: Saving Millions, One Prototype at a Time

When Medtronic brought Stratasys FDM technology in-house, they transformed their prototyping process.

The Medtronic team reduced the average cost per part by 80% and saved more than $6 million in four years compared to outsourcing to machine shops.

With same-day iterations and hands-on design control, their development cycle accelerated dramatically, without compromising quality.

these two cases are old and Endocure is a great example how to fast track R&D development using 3DP .

On average, we estimate FDM parts cost 80% less to produce when compared to machined parts.”

$6 Million Saved and 80% cheaper prototypes

That's what Medtronic achieved with Stratasys Medical.

EndoCure: Enabling Earlier Endometriosis Detection with 3D Printing

To validate their robotic ultrasound platform, EndoCure needed anatomically accurate phantoms that mimicked soft tissue under ultrasound—something traditional models couldn’t offer.

Using Stratasys Digital Anatomy™ technology, they produced custom 3D printed phantoms with lifelike echogenicity, enabling faster iteration and more precise testing.

The result: a game-changing diagnostic tool with the potential to detect endometriosis earlier, more reliably, and less invasively.

Stratasys gave us the fidelity we needed to validate a novel approach to a deeply underdiagnosed disease.”

Medical Device Manufacturing Equipment & 3D Printing Use Cases Across the Lifecycle

Medical Device Innovation: A standout example of innovation in diagnostic technology comes from a recently developed pen designed to detect Parkinson’s disease. The device’s barrel was 3D printed using a Stratasys F370™ Composite-Ready FDM® printer, allowing rapid iteration, ergonomic design, and production-ready durability. This real-world application highlights how 3D printing has evolved beyond early-stage prototyping—now playing a central role in how medical devices are developed, tested, and brought to market.

Surgical Tools: Custom jigs, guides, and fixtures can be 3D printed to exact specifications, giving surgeons the tools they need for improved precision and efficiency.  At the University Hospital of Southern Denmark in Esbjerg, clinicians collaborated with engineers to 3D print patient-specific surgical guides for orthopedic procedures, reducing surgery time and improving outcomes. For OEMs, this demonstrates how 3D printing can support tool design, ergonomic testing, and clinician-driven innovation - delivering faster results without the overhead of traditional tooling.  

Anatomical Models: Digital Anatomy™ technology enables OEMs to replicate the mechanical behavior of real tissue reducing the need for animal or body donors in many testing and training scenarios. For example, 

Diagnostic Devices: Additive manufacturing allows for rapid iteration for complex diagnostic tools, which is critical for validating performance and usability before investing in full-scale production. For example, researchers at Creighton University School of Medicine developing an ultrasound-guided breast biopsy training model used Digital Anatomy™ to mimic the mechanical and visual properties of human breast tissue. The result: a cost-effective, highly realistic training platform that performed successfully in a clinical pilot study. OEMs can leverage this same approach to test novel diagnostic technologies in controlled, repeatable environments—ultimately reducing risk in design decisions and shortening development timelines.

Anatomical Skull 3D printed using Stratasys J5 MediJet Printer

Why Medical Device OEMs Can’t Delay Adopting 3D Printing

Delays in the development cycle aren’t just frustrating, they’re expensive. Lengthy iteration timelines, outsourced prototyping, and dependence on CNC-machined parts can lead to missed product launches, higher production costs, and even increased clinical risk. Design flaws that aren’t caught early can derail trials or trigger post-market complications, while every external iteration adds both time and cost to your bottom line.

In contrast, bringing additive manufacturing in house gives OEMs far greater control. Teams can iterate on-demand, producing five to six design versions in a matter of days instead of waiting weeks. For example, when Clubfoot Solutions set out to redesign a pediatric brace, they partnered with the University of Iowa’s Protostudios lab to accelerate development using Stratasys FDM® and PolyJet™ 3D printing. In just a few weeks, the team produced 18 design iterations identifying and resolving a key mechanical weakness early in the process. This rapid, hands-on approach enabled real-time testing and refinement, helping bring a safer, more effective product to market faster.

With in-house 3D printing, functional components and anatomically accurate models can be printed for real-world testing, accelerating both benchtop validation and clinical trial preparation.

With digital inventories and just-in-time production capabilities, manufacturers can reduce waste, respond quickly to design changes, and maintain agility across the product lifecycle. This kind of flexibility and control helps reduce time to market for medical devices giving OEMs a competitive edge in fast-moving markets.

This shift not only improves development speed. It helps mitigate risk and ensure design quality at every stage. For OEMs navigating a highly competitive and regulated environment, additive manufacturing isn’t just a faster option, it’s a smarter one.

Kickbar 3D printed with Stratasys Medical 3D Printer

How OEMs Can Start with 3D Printing Medical Device Prototyping Across the Lifecycle

For engineering, R&D, and manufacturing teams ready to take the next step, the key is understanding where 3D printing can deliver the most immediate value—and how to scale its impact over time. Rather than viewing additive manufacturing as a one-off solution, leading manufacturers are embedding it strategically across the entire product lifecycle. From early feasibility studies to post-market iterations, 3D printing can be integrated at every stage to accelerate development, reduce risk, and increase flexibility.

  1. Research Feasibility: Conduct early testing and generate investor-ready samples.

  2. Design & Development: Rapidly prototype, iterate, and validate with user input. This stage is where 3D printing medical device prototyping accelerates feedback loops, enabling teams to iterate rapidly and validate designs early.

  3. Design Transfer & Production: Ramp up production with custom jigs, fixtures, and small batch runs.

  4. Regulatory Approval & Launch: Support documentation with consistent, repeatable manufacturing outputs.

  5. Post-Market Surveillance: Use 3D printed models to investigate field failures and design improvements.

Each stage is an opportunity to reduce time to market, optimize design, and lower costs. And each one benefits from the right 3D printing technologies, materials, and digital workflows.

Medical Device 3D printed using Stratsys PolyJet Technology

Ready to Rethink Medical Device Development?

Stratasys offers a full suite of 3D printing solutions for OEMs—whether you’re creating functional prototypes, high-fidelity anatomical models, or scalable production components. From FDM for prototyping, to PolyJet for multi-material realism, to P3 and SAF for production-ready parts, our solutions support every phase of medical device production with precision, speed, and scalability.

Download the Medical Device Lifecycle Guide

See how leading OEMs are using 3D printing to build faster, smarter workflows from concept to commercialization.