
A major dental breakthrough has just been recognised with a prestigious global award. It could make your trips to the dentist much safer and faster.
Associate Professor Vinicius Rosa, a researcher at the National University of Singapore (NUS) Faculty of Dentistry, has gained international recognition. He's developed a new way to create and test biomaterials.
This innovative approach could make dental treatments safer, more effective, cheaper, and faster for patients. It also aims to reduce reliance on animal testing.
Assoc Prof Rosa recently received the IADR Innovation in Oral Care Award. This highly competitive global accolade comes from the International Association for Dental, Oral and Craniofacial Research (IADR) and Haleon.
The award was presented in San Diego, USA, between 25-28 March 2026. It highlights bold, high-impact innovations set to improve oral health for everyone.
The project tackles a huge problem in biomedical research. Most materials are currently tested in basic lab models.
These models don't truly reflect how human tissues behave. This often means traditional systems fail to predict real-life results.
It leads to long development cycles and continued animal testing. Assoc Prof Rosa has been using AI to develop biomaterials since 2018.
His goal is to match them with patient needs. Now, he'll use this expertise to create advanced hydrogel-based systems.
These are soft, water-rich materials that mimic human tissue. Combined with AI, they will create “living” lab models that change over time, just like real body tissues.
This research flips the usual process. Instead of creating materials and then testing them, AI designs biomaterials based on how cells are expected to behave.
This allows scientists to study treatments in dynamic, evolving environments. For example, they can see how inflamed tissue gets more acidic and responds to treatment.
This means therapies can be tested under more realistic conditions much earlier. It improves reliability and cuts down on trial-and-error experiments.
The benefits aren't just for dentistry. This method could speed up the development of safer biomaterials and treatments across all healthcare.
Assoc Prof Rosa said: “This award recognises not just a scientific advance, but a shift in how we think about designing and testing biomaterials. By creating systems that better reflect real biology, we can improve how treatments are developed and ultimately benefit patients more quickly.”
The Innovation in Oral Care Awards offer up to 50,000 USD to recipients. These funds help advance oral care programmes worldwide. The goal is to develop new compounds, biomaterials, or devices for public health.
MORE: King's College Hospital receives national award for blood cancer care — https://trendwiremedia.com/2026/03/23/kings-college-hospital-receives-national-award-for-blood-cancer-care/
MORE: The Grand Tour Returns With New Trio To Front Global Motoring Reboot — https://trendwiremedia.com/2026/02/08/the-grand-tour-returns-with-new-trio-to-front-global-motoring-reboot/
MORE: Manchester nature summit secures global deal to protect the economy — https://trendwiremedia.com/2026/02/10/manchester-nature-summit-secures-global-deal-to-protect-the-economy/
Subscribe for $2 every four weeks for the first six months
Subscribe for $20 every four weeks for the first six months
Editorial Note: This report utilises automated data-sourcing and drafting technologies to ensure rapid coverage. Every article undergoes rigorous human fact-checking and editorial review by the Trend Wire Media Editorial Desk to ensure accuracy and adherence to our journalistic standards.