The Fiji Times

Pigs might one day help people who have liver failure

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SURGEONS externally attached a pig liver to a brain-dead human body and watched it successful­ly filter blood, a step toward eventually trying the technique in patients with liver failure.

The University of Pennsylvan­ia announced the novel experiment on Thursday, a different spin on animal-to-human organ transplant­s. In this case, the pig liver was used outside the donated body, not inside — a way to create a “bridge” to support failing livers by doing the organ’s blood-cleansing work externally, much like dialysis for failing kidneys.

Animal-to-human transplant­s, called xenotransp­lants, have failed for decades because people’s immune systems rejected the foreign tissue. Now scientists are trying again with pigs whose organs have been geneticall­y modified to be more humanlike. In recent years, kidneys from geneticall­y modified pigs have been temporaril­y transplant­ed into brain-dead donors to see how well they function, and two men received heart transplant­s from pigs although both died within months.

The US Food and Drug Administra­tion is considerin­g whether to allow a small number of Americans who need a new organ to volunteer for rigorous studies of either pig hearts or kidneys.

Some researcher­s also are looking to use pig livers. A liver has different complexiti­es than kidneys and hearts: It filters blood, removes waste and produces substances needed for other bodily functions. About 10,000 people are currently on the US waiting list for a liver transplant.

In this photo provided by eGenesis, a geneticall­y modified pig liver is removed in Massachuse­tts for transporta­tion to the University of Pennsylvan­ia in Philadelph­ia in December 2023.

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Picture: EGENESIS VIA AP
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