Who wants a pig organ? Patients sick and tired of waiting years for a
transplant
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[December 18, 2024]
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The calls and emails started coming into NYU
Langone Health and Massachusetts General Hospital soon after doctors
began experimenting with pig organs in humans.
People worried they’ll never get a scarce human transplant asked: When
could we get a pig kidney?
Alex Berrios of Louisville, Kentucky, needs a second transplant but
finding another human match is proving impossible. So he's closely
watching for a chance at pig kidney research.
"It may not work, and I have to be OK with that,” Berrios said. “I think
it’s worth the shot.”
Now two U.S. companies aim to begin the world’s first clinical trials of
xenotransplantation in 2025 – using pig kidneys or hearts to try to save
human lives. Would-be volunteers are impatient to see if they'll qualify
as researchers fine-tune how best to test if the humanized pig organs
they’ve designed might really work.
Anticipation is growing with news that an Alabama woman was faring well
after a pig kidney transplant at NYU in late November. Towana Looney is
the fifth American to receive a gene-edited pig organ, each case so far
an emergency experiment for people out of options.
None of the previous recipients — two given pig hearts and two kidneys —
survived more than two months but that hasn't deterred researchers
hunting an alternative to the dire shortage of transplantable organs.
“We have to have the courage to continue,” said University of Maryland
transplant surgeon Dr. Bartley Griffith.
Patients are driving the quest for pig organ transplants
Back in 2022, Griffith had a hard time figuring out how to ask a dying
patient if he’d consider undergoing the world’s first transplant of a
gene-edited pig heart.
“I was so afraid to mention the word pig heart,” Griffith said. He
marveled that patient David Bennett responded with a joke about oinking
and made clear if the last-ditch attempt failed that “maybe you’ll learn
something for others like me.”
Fast forward to late 2023, when patients at a National Kidney Foundation
meeting with FDA officials and pig developers described a life so
miserable on dialysis that they, too, would chance an animal organ.
“Why not try? That was really what we took back,” said Mike Curtis, CEO
of eGenesis, one of the companies developing organs. “It was like we
really almost have an obligation to try.”
“The patients pushed us to go ahead,” agreed Dr. Tatsuo Kawai, a Mass
General surgeon who’d been reluctant to even broach the idea – but last
March, four months after that meeting, gave a longtime patient the first
gene-edited pig kidney.
Sick and tired from dialysis, patients raise their hands for pig
kidneys
In Palm Springs, California, Carl McNew emailed NYU to ask about
volunteering while he’s still fairly healthy.
McNew donated a kidney to his husband in 2015 but later his remaining
kidney began declining, something very rare in living donors.
Medications and intermittent dialysis are helping but McNew knows he’ll
eventually need a transplant.
“There’s just something about being part of something like that, that is
so cutting-edge,” said McNew, who spotted news of NYU’s xenotransplant
research in 2023 and emailed his interest.
For Louisville’s Berrios, donor scarcity isn’t the only hurdle. Born
with a single kidney that failed in his late 20s, a living donor
transplant restored his health for 13 years. But it failed in 2020 and
he has since developed antibodies that would destroy another human
kidney, what doctors call “highly sensitized.”
Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Berrios quietly slips out of his
home before dawn to spend nearly four hours tethered to a dialysis
machine. Getting the grueling treatments at 5 a.m. is the only way the
father of two can both stay alive and hold down a fulltime job.
But dialysis doesn’t fully replace kidney function – people slowly get
sicker. So even as Berrios tried an experimental therapy to tamp down
his problem antibodies, he told NYU he's interested in a pig kidney.
Expected soon: Rigorous trials testing pig organ transplants
FDA rules require that pig organs be extensively tested in monkeys or
baboons before humans. And while researchers have extended those
primates’ survival to a year, sometimes longer, they were desperate for
experience with people. After all, the pig organs are genetically
altered to be more humanlike, not more baboon-like.
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Dr. Silke Niederhaus exams patient Eric Lyons at the University of
Maryland in Baltimore, Md., on May 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Shelby Lum)
At NYU and the University of Alabama
at Birmingham, surgeons first tested pig organs in bodies of the
recently deceased, donated for scientific research.
And patients given pig organs so far have been “compassionate use”
transplants, experiments that FDA allows in select emergency cases
for people out of other options.
Although the first four didn’t survive long, in part because of
complications from other diseases, those experiments proved pig
organs could work at least for a while and offered other lessons.
For example, discovery of a hidden pig virus in the first heart
transplant prompted better tests for that risk.
Only rigorous studies comparing similarly ill patients will offer a
clearer picture of pig organs’ potential – maybe those like Looney.
Despite eight years of dialysis, she wasn’t nearly as sick as prior
xenotransplant recipients but couldn’t find a matching donor. Like
Berrios, she had a highly sensitized immune response.
Looney may be “kind of a litmus test” for trial candidates, said
NYU’s Montgomery, who led her transplant with her original surgeon
in Alabama, Dr. Jayme Locke. “She’s received the transplant at just
the right time,” before dialysis did too much damage.
What gene edits produced the best pig organs for human
transplant?
Scientists have tried animal-to-human transplants for years without
success but now they can edit pig genes, trying to bridge the
species gap enough to keep the human immune system from immediately
attacking the foreign tissue. Still, nobody knows the best gene
combination.
Revivicor, a United Therapeutics subsidiary, produces kidneys and
hearts with 10 gene edits, “knocking out” pig genes that trigger
hyper-rejection and excessive organ growth and adding some human
genes to improve compatibility. Maryland used hearts with 10 gene
edits in its two xenotransplants. Looney also got a kidney with 10
gene edits, based on Locke’s research when she worked in Alabama.
While Montgomery is thrilled with Looney’s progress, he's done most
work using Revivicor pigs with just one gene edit, in a
xenotransplant last April and in research with the deceased.
“Our feeling is, you know, less is more,” said Montgomery, noting
it’s easier to mass produce pigs with fewer gene alterations.
Looney’s transplant offers a chance to compare “really how much
difference those additional gene edits are making.”
In Boston, eGenesis has still another approach – a whopping 69 gene
edits. In addition to 10 genetic alterations to improve human
compatibility, genes linked to certain pig viruses also are
inactivated.
Pig organ transplants still have much to prove
Researchers feel pressure to show if pig organs can keep people
alive much longer than a few months, said eGenesis' Curtis. If not,
the question will be “do we have the right gene edits?”
The balance is choosing participants sick enough to qualify but not
so sick they have no chance.
“There’s a tremendous number of patients who would be very willing,
very willing to do this,” said Dr. Silke Niederhaus of the
University of Maryland, who isn’t involved in xenotransplant
research but watches it closely.
Niederhaus became a kidney transplant surgeon because around her
12th birthday, one saved her life. That kidney lasted three decades.
When it failed, it took five years to find another. So she
understands the draw of pig research, and urges people to learn
their odds of getting a human kidney before volunteering.
If they’re younger, healthier or have a living donor, “I would
probably say go with what’s known and what’s proven,” Niederhaus
said. But if they’re older and dialysis is starting to fail, “maybe
it’s worth taking the risk.”
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AP video journalist Shelby Lum contributed to this story.
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