Khaleej Times

Pig kidney works in human patient in ‘potential miracle’, says US surgeon

-

AUS medical team has succeeded in temporaril­y attaching a pig’s kidney to a person, a transplant breakthrou­gh hailed as a “potential miracle” by the surgeon who led the procedure.

The surgery, carried out on September 25, involved a geneticall­y modified donor animal and a brain dead patient on a ventilator whose family had given permission for the two-day experiment, for the sake of advancing science.

“It did what it’s supposed to do, which is remove waste and make urine,” Robert Montgomery, director of the transplant institute at New York University (NYU) Langone, told AFP in an interview.

Critically, the organ was able to reduce the level of the molecule creatinine, a key indicator of kidney health that was elevated in the patient prior to the transplant.

Montgomery carried out the surgery with several colleagues over the course of around two hours. They joined the kidney to blood vessels on the top of one of the patient’s legs, so that they could observe it and take biopsy samples.

The patient had wanted to be an organ donor and their family was initially disappoint­ed when told their loved one’s organs were not suitable, said Montgomery.

But “they felt a sense of relief that this was another opportunit­y for donation,” he said. The patient was taken off the ventilator and passed away following the 54-hour test. Earlier research

It did what it’s supposed to do, which is remove waste and make urine.” Robert Montgomery Director of the transplant institute at New York University

has shown that kidneys from pigs are viable in nonhuman primates for up to a year, but this was the first time it had been attempted with a human patient.

The donor pig belonged to a herd that had undergone a genetic editing procedure to knock out a gene that produces a particular sugar, which would otherwise have triggered a strong immune response and led to organ rejection.

The editing was performed by biotech firm Revivicor, a subsidiary of United Therapeuti­cs.

“It is still a question what would happen three weeks from now, three months, three years,” said Montgomery.

“The only way we’re really going to be able to answer that is to move this into a living human trial. But I think this is a really important intermedia­te step, which tells us that at least initially, things are probably going to be okay.”

He plans to submit the findings to a scientific journal in the next month, and says a clinical trial could take place in around a year or two. The news was welcomed

cautiously by outside experts, who nonetheles­s said they would like to see the peer-reviewed data before drawing firm conclusion­s. “This news is a significan­t scientific achievemen­t in the xenotransp­lantation field,” Hynek Mergental, a surgeon at the University of Birmingham in Britain said in a statement.

If confirmed, “it would be a major step forward in the organ transplant field that might solve the critical shortage of donor organs,” he added. The news comes amid a dire shortage of

transplant organs. According to official US data, there are nearly 107,000 Americans awaiting an organ — 90,000 of whom need a kidney. Seventeen Americans die each day while waiting for an organ.

To meet demand, doctors have long been interested in so-called xenotransp­lantation, or cross-species organ donation, with experiment­s tracing back to the 17th century.

Early research focused on harvesting organs from primates — for example a baboon heart was transplant­ed into a newborn known as “Baby Fae” in 1984, but she survived only 20 days. Today, pig heart valves are widely used in humans, and pig skin is grafted on human burn victims Pigs make the ideal donors because of their size, their rapid growth and large litters, and the fact they are already raised as a food source, said Montgomery. —

 ?? AFP ?? In this September 25, 2021, image courtesy of NYU Langone Health, the surgical team examines the geneticall­y engineered pig kidney for signs of rejection. —
AFP In this September 25, 2021, image courtesy of NYU Langone Health, the surgical team examines the geneticall­y engineered pig kidney for signs of rejection. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates