Daily Express

New heart swaps giving hope to sick youngsters

- By Hanna Geissler

CHILDREN desperatel­y waiting for a heart transplant have been given hope by a technique that makes it easier to find a donor.

Young patients often face an agonising wait for a suitable heart of a similar size to their own and a compatible blood type.

But removing their blood and washing out their circulatio­n with a type that matches the donor’s prevents rejection.

In the past this technique could only be used on children who weighed up to 15kg and were aged around four, because it uses three times more blood than is being replaced. But the new technique removes mismatched antibodies from the patient’s blood, which halves the amount of blood needed and means it can be used for eight-year-olds.

Thrilled

The pioneering work has been led by Dr Richard Issitt, a senior paediatric perfusioni­st at Great Ormond Street Hospital, with funding from the British Heart Foundation.The team, also involving the UCL Institute of Cardiovasc­ular Science, have performed 10 transplant­s with the new technique. Patients include Lucy from Basingstok­e, who had the procedure when she was eight. Before the op she was unable to walk from the car park to school. Now she is trampolini­ng, sailing and doing everything her sister does.

Her mum Jenny said: “The other day she said, ‘I don’t feel left out any more.’”

Around 50 children are waiting for a heart transplant in the UK, the British Heart Foundation said.The charity’s medical director, Prof Sir Nilesh Samani, said: “We’re absolutely thrilled to see Lucy bounce along.We hope this research will give many more children the same chance.”

 ?? ?? ‘I don’t feel left out any more’...Lucy in a wheelchair before her operation, above, and paddle-boarding afterwards
‘I don’t feel left out any more’...Lucy in a wheelchair before her operation, above, and paddle-boarding afterwards

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