David Bennett received the transplant on Jan 7.
His condition began deteriorating several days ago, the hospital
said in a statement on Wednesday, and he was given "compassionate
palliative care" after it became clear that he would not recover.
Bennett "wasn't able to overcome what turned out to be the
devastating debilitation" caused by the heart failure he experienced
before the transplant, Dr. Bartley Griffith, director of the UMCC
cardiac transplant program, said in a videotaped statement.
The transplanted heart functioned "beautifully," Griffith said.
Bennett was able to communicate with his family during his final
hours, the hospital said.
Bennett first came to UMMC as a patient in October and was placed on
a heart-lung bypass machine, but was deemed ineligible for a
conventional heart transplant.
After Bennett received a pig heart that had been modified to prevent
rejection with the use of new gene editing tools, his son called the
procedure "a miracle."
For Bennett, the procedure was his last option.
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"Before consenting to receive the transplant, Mr
Bennett was fully informed of the procedure's
risks, and that the procedure was experimental
with unknown risks and benefits," the hospital
said.
Researchers have long considered pigs to be a
potential source of organs for transplants
because they are anatomically similar to humans
in many ways. Prior efforts at pig-to-human
transplants had failed because of genetic
differences that caused organ rejection or
viruses that posed an infection risk.
"The demonstration that it was possible - that
we were able to take a genetically engineered
organ and watch it function flawlessly for nine
weeks, is pretty positive in terms of the
potential for this therapy," Griffith said.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru and
Nancy Lapid in New York; Editing by Chizu
Nomiyama, Bill Berkrot, Caroline Humer and
Robert Birsel)
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