Short Bio
Andreas Müller studied human medicine in Basel and Paris (1994-200) and dentistry in Zurich (2000-2003). Training started in general surgery at the University Hospital Basel in neurosurgery, plastic surgery, intensive care and emergency medicine, followed by specialized training in oral and maxillofacial surgery with focus on facial malformations. Subsequent European fellowship in cleft and craniofacial surgery and PhD in biomedical engineering (Hyderabad, India; Lyon, France) (2010-2012). Microsurgical specialization was done with Prof. Devauchelle in Amiens. Since 2014, he has been the head of the facial malformations department, in which field he obtained his habilitation in 2016. His research group is active in the Department of Clinical Research and the Department of Biomedical Engineering (www.mueller.medizin.unibas.ch). The research interest covers the entire field of clinical and preclinical research for craniofacial anomalies.
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Selected Publications
Benitez, Benito K., Brudnicki, Andrzej, Tache, Ana, Wieprzowski, Łukasz, Surowiec, Zbigniew, Nalabothu, Prasad, Lill, Yoriko, & Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery, 92, 198–206. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjps.2024.03.001
(2024). Comparative study on cleft palate morphology after passive presurgical plate therapy in unilateral cleft lip and palate.
Meyer S, Benitez BK, Thieringer FM, & Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 153(2), 462–465. https://doi.org/10.1097/PRS.0000000000010684
. (2024). Three-Dimensional Printable Open-Source Cleft Lip and Palate Impression Trays: A Single-Impression Workflow.
Schnabel TN, Gözcü B, Gotardo P, Lingens L, Dorda D, Vetterli F, Emhemmed A, Nalabothu P, Lill Y, Benitez BK, International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery, 18(6), 1119–1125. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11548-023-02858-6
, Gross M, & Solenthaler B. (2023). Automated and data-driven plate computation for presurgical cleft lip and palate treatment.
Benitez, Benito K., Brudnicki, Andrzej, Surowiec, Zbigniew, Wieprzowski, Łukasz, Rasadurai, Abeelan, Nalabothu, Prasad, Lill, Yoriko, & Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery, 75(11), 4233–4242. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjps.2022.08.015
(2022). Digital impressions from newborns to preschoolers with cleft lip and palate: A two-centers experience.
Benitez B.K., Brudnicki A., Surowiec Z., Singh R.K., Nalabothu P., Schumann D., & Journal of Cranio-Maxillofacial Surgery, 50(1), 76–85. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcms.2021.07.002
(2022). Continuous circular closure in unilateral cleft lip and plate repair in one surgery.
Selected Projects & Collaborations

Burden-Reduced Cleft lip and palate Care and Healing
Research Project | 3 Project Members
Every 700th birth worldwide is affected by any type of uncompleted development of the upper lip and palatal prominences leading to orofacial cleft (cleft lip and palate). In absence of early surgical correction, main concerns are social discrimination by the disfiguration, nasal leakage of food leading to failure to thrive adequately, and impossibility of speech development. No effective preventive measures exist. Currently, two principles are used and commonly applied complementary as treatment strategies: (1) a palatal plate therapy after birth to keep the tongue out of the cleft space and to narrow the palatal cleft and (2) a multi-step surgical repair. However, this strategy necessitates a palatal impression that endangers the child’s airway and a high surgical burden. The project therefore develops a non-invasive strategy for the palatal plate therapy followed by a one-step surgical repair of the entire cleft lip and palate malformation.
With the use of machine learning algorithms, smartphone-based images of the palate malformation, and 3D printing of tailor-made palatal orthopaedic plates, this project will potentially revolutionise the standard course of treatment of cleft lip and palate. We aim to reduce burden on the patient receiving the cleft lip and palate surgical treatment and to improve the overall long-term outcome. We will exploit our surgical expertise and 3D morphometric knowledges, combined with artificial intelligence to simplify the treatment procedure by developing a ground-breaking new cleft treatment regime:
- Image-based, non-invasive palatal shape reconstruction with the aid of smartphones and a software program based on artificial intelligence
- Use of 3D printing (Zarean et al. 2022) following the automated palatal plate design (Schnabel et al. 2023) to simplify the production process
- Replace multiple surgical steps with one single surgical intervention through use of the palatal plate (passive plate therapy)
Achieving these goals would provide us with a passive, pre-surgical treatment that is physically, technologically and economically realizable worldwide including in low- and middle-income countries, therefore ultimately enable promotion of single-step surgical treatment to replace the widely performed multi-step surgical treatment which impose large burden on the children and their families.