Two pig heart transplants succeed in brain-dead recipients
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[July 13, 2022]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - Surgeons at New York University
(NYU) have successfully transplanted genetically-engineered pig hearts
into two brain-dead people, researchers said on Tuesday, moving a step
closer to a long-term goal of using pig parts to address the shortage of
human organs for transplant.
The hearts functioned normally, with no signs of rejection during the
three-day experiments in June and July, they said at a news conference.
The experiments followed the death in March of a 57-year-old man with
terminal heart disease who made history two months earlier at the
University of Maryland as the first person to receive a genetically
modified pig heart. The reasons why his new heart eventually failed are
still unclear.
NYU procured the hearts from pigs engineered by Revivicor Inc and
screened them for viruses using an enhanced monitoring protocol, the
researchers said. The hearts showed no evidence of a pig virus called
porcine cytomegalovirus that was detected in the blood of the Maryland
man and may have contributed to his death.
The pigs had four genetic modifications to prevent rejection and
abnormal organ growth and six to help prevent incompatibilities between
pigs and humans.
NYU researchers also transplanted pig kidneys into two brain-dead
recipients in 2021.
For now, they believe xenotransplantation is safer in brain-dead
recipients than in living patients and also more informative because
biopsies can be done more often.
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Deane E. Smith, MD, (from left) cardiothoracic surgeon and director
of mechanical circulatory support at NYU Langone Health,
cardiothoracic surgeon Syed T. Hussain, MD, and Nader Moazami, MD,
surgical director of heart transplantation at the NYU Langone
Transplant Institute, prepare the pig heart for xenotransplantation
at NYU Langone Health on July 6, 2022, in New York City. Credit: Joe
Carrotta for NYU Langone Health
More-frequent testing provides
tremendous detail, said Dr. Robert Montgomery, director of the NYU
Langone Transplant Institute, and a recipient of a heart transplant
at NYU. "We were able in real time to capture everything that was
going on during that 72-hour period," he said.
The procurement, transport, transplant surgery, and
immunosuppression were all performed the same way as in typical
human heart transplants, the researchers said.
"Our goal is to integrate the practices used in a
typical, everyday heart transplant, only with a nonhuman organ that
will function normally without additional aid from untested devices
or medicines," said Dr. Nader Moazami, surgical director of heart
transplantation at NYU Langone.
The 72-hour experiments produced preliminary data, leaving many
questions to be answered before starting human pig heart trials, he
added.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; editing by Caroline Humer and Bill
Berkrot)
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