New Hampshire man is 2nd person known to be living with a pig kidney
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[February 08, 2025]
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
A New Hampshire man fought for the chance at a pig kidney transplant,
spending months getting into good enough shape to be part of a small
pilot study of a highly experimental treatment.
His effort paid off: Tim Andrews, 66, is only the second person known to
be living with a pig kidney. Andrews is free from dialysis,
Massachusetts General Hospital announced Friday, and recovering so well
from the Jan. 25 transplant that he left the hospital a week later.
“When I woke up in the recovery room, I was a new man,” Andrews told The
Associated Press.
Andrews’ surgery comes at a turning point in the quest to tell if
animal-to-human transplants could help ease the shortage of donated
human organs. The first four pig organ transplants — two hearts and two
kidneys — were short-lived. But the fifth xenotransplant recipient, an
Alabama woman not nearly as sick as prior patients, boosted the field —
thriving for now 2½ months after a pig kidney transplant at NYU Langone
Health in November.
Doctors are moving from those one-off experiments to more formal
studies. As they monitor Andrews’ recovery, doctors at Mass General
Brigham have Food and Drug Administration permission to perform two
additional transplants in their pilot study, using gene-edited pig
kidneys supplied by biotech eGenesis.
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And United Therapeutics, another developer of gene-edited pig organs,
just won FDA approval for the world’s first clinical trial of
xenotransplantation. Initially, six patients will receive pig kidneys —
and if they fare well over six months, up to 50 additional patients will
receive transplants.
“This is uncharted territory,” said Mass General’s Dr. Tatsuo Kawai, who
led both Andrews’ surgery and the world’s first pig kidney transplant
last year. But with lessons from animal research and the prior human
attempts, he said, “I’m very optimistic. And hopefully we can get to
survival, kidney survival, for over two years.”
Scientists are genetically altering pigs so their organs are more
humanlike to address the transplant shortage. More than 100,000 people
are on the U.S. transplant list, most who need a kidney, and thousands
die waiting.
Andrews’ kidneys abruptly failed about two years ago, and the Concord,
New Hampshire, grandfather struggled with fatigue and complications from
dialysis. He’s on the transplant list but doctors warned it was a long
shot. It can take seven years or more for people with Andrews’ blood
type to find a matching kidney. Meanwhile, people slowly get sicker on
dialysis — five-year survival is about 50% — and Andrews already had had
a heart attack.
“I have seen my mortality and I was ready to fight,” Andrews said. So he
asked Mass General if he could get a pig kidney instead. “I told them.
‘Anything, I’ll do anything. You give me a list of things you want me to
do and I’ll do it.’”
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Tim Andrews smiles as he leaves Massachusetts General Hospital in
Boston on Feb. 1, 2025. (Kate Flock/Massachusetts General Hospital
via AP)
 Mass General transplant nephrologist
Dr. Leonardo Riella said Andrews was weak and struggling with
diabetes, including a slow-healing diabetic foot ulcer that hindered
walking. He’d have to get more fit to be a candidate.
Andrews started physical therapy and returned six months later about
30 pounds lighter and “running down the hallway almost,” Riella
recalled. “He was just, you know, a different person,” so they
started checking if he’d qualify for the pilot study.
One big question was cardiac fitness: Mass General’s first pig
kidney recipient had underlying heart disease that killed him. But
Riella said intense exams showed Andrews’ “heart was in the best
shape possible.”
Still, Andrews was a little nervous and sought advice from the only
other person who knew what a pig kidney transplant was like — the
NYU patient, Towana Looney.
“We just prayed together and talked about how it would be,” Andrews
said of their phone calls before and after his transplant. He said
Looney advised “to just stay strong and that’s what I’m doing.”
Doctors said Andrews' pig kidney turned pink and quickly began
producing urine in the operating room, and since then has cleared
waste normally with no signs of rejection. Andrews spent the week
after his discharge in a nearby Boston hotel for daily checkups but
is expected to return home to New Hampshire soon.
NYU transplant surgeon Dr. Robert Montgomery said patients like
those in Mass General’s pilot study could be “the sweet spot” for
early xenotransplants — not yet too sick from years of dialysis but
unlikely to survive long enough for a human transplant.
“Those are the patients where it really makes sense for them to try
something else,” said Montgomery. His hospital is one of two that
will be part of United Therapeutics’ clinical trial later this year,
which will include similar patients.
It’s too early to know how Andrews will fare but if the pig kidney
were to fail, Riella said he’d still qualify for a human transplant
and, now deemed inactive on the transplant list, wouldn’t lose his
“waiting time” that helps determine priority.
Andrews now wants to return to his old dialysis clinic and “tell
these people there’s hope, because no hope is not a good thing,” he
said.
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