The Borneo Post

HIV-positive mother donates liver to save her child’s life

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JOHANNESBU­RG: Faced with the only chance to save a child’s life, doctors in South Africa have performed a medical first – transplant­ing part of the liver from a HIV-positive mother to her HIV-negative child.

The doctors at the University of Witwatersr­and in Johannesbu­rg revealed that, one year after the operation, the child may not have caught the virus from her new liver.

The child had a terminal liver disease and would have died without the transplant.

Medication given to the child “may have prevented the transmissi­on of HIV.

However, we will only know this conclusive­ly over time,” said Jean Botha, chief surgeon at the university.

The team of doctors performed the world’s first liver transplant from a mother living with HIV to her critically-ill HIV-negative child, who had been waiting 180 days for a donor.

They said that the mother and child, who have not been identified, have fully recovered and are in good health.

The mother, who was being successful­ly treated with antiretrov­iral medication, had repeatedly asked to donate her liver to save her child’s life – posing a major ethical dilemma for doctors due to the risk of HIV transmissi­on.

South Africa has the world’s largest HIV treatment programme and the use of HIVpositiv­e donors could help tackle the severe overall shortage of donors.

In 2017, 14 children waiting for liver transplant­s in Johannesbu­rg died before having the operation.

“We hope that this groundbrea­king operation will be the first of many like it and will contribute towards promoting justice and equity in liver transplant­ation,” June Fabian, research director at the university’s medical centre, said in a press release.

A paper detailing the case was published on Thursday in the peer-reviewed AIDS medical journal. — AFP

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