Texarkana Gazette

Faster kidney transplant available, but with Hepatitis C

- By Lauran Neergaard

WASHINGTON—A bold experiment is giving some patients a chance at cutting years off their wait for a kidney transplant if they agree to a drastic-sounding option—getting an organ almost sure to infect them with hepatitis C.

Betting on new medication­s that promise to cure hepatitis C, two leading transplant centers aim to use organs that today go to waste, a bid to put a dent in the nation’s long transplant waiting list.

Pilot studies are underway at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and Johns Hopkins University to test transplant­ing kidneys from deceased donors with hepatitis C into recipients who don’t already have that virus. If the groundbrea­king research eventually pans out, hundreds more kidneys—and maybe some hearts and lungs, too—could be transplant­ed every year.

“We always dreaded hepatitis C,” said Dr. Peter Reese, a Penn kidney specialist who is helping lead the research. “But now hepatitis C is just a different disease,” enough to consider what he calls the trade-off of getting a new kidney years faster but one that comes with a hopefully treatable infection.

It’s a trade-off prompted by an organ shortage. More than 99,000 people are on the national kidney waiting list, but only about 17,000 people a year get a transplant and 4 percent a year die waiting, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS).

“If we had enough organs, we wouldn’t do this,” said Dr. Niraj Desai, who is leading the Hopkins study. But, Desai said, “most patients are pretty open to the idea once they hear what the alternativ­es are.”

Doctors had told 66-yearold Irma Hendricks of East Stroudsbur­g, Pennsylvan­ia, to expect at least a five-year wait for a kidney transplant. Dialysis three times a week was keeping her alive, but leaving her with no energy for even routine activities. “I call it the zombie syndrome,” she said.

She jumped at the chance to enroll in Penn’s study, even though doctors made clear they hoped for but couldn’t guarantee a hepatitis cure.

“My son said, ‘Mom, this is a no-brainer. Just do it,’” Hendricks said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Irma Hendricks, right, talks with her physician Peter P. Reese, MD at Hospital of the University of Pennsylvan­ia on Oct. 6 in Philadelph­ia. Hendricks received a kidney transplant from a donor with hepatitis C, and took medication­s after surgery that...
Associated Press ■ Irma Hendricks, right, talks with her physician Peter P. Reese, MD at Hospital of the University of Pennsylvan­ia on Oct. 6 in Philadelph­ia. Hendricks received a kidney transplant from a donor with hepatitis C, and took medication­s after surgery that...

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