The Guardian (USA)

David Pegg obituary

- Colin Green

In the early days of organ transplant­ation one of the thorniest problems facing medical science was how to keep an organ functional in the period between harvesting it from a donor and inserting it into a grateful recipient. David Pegg, who has died aged 86, did much towards solving that conundrum, and so enabled us to take for granted our capacity to stop the clock of life by freezing or cooling an organ before restarting its normal function.

One of the pioneers in the field of low temperatur­e biology – building on the work of Audrey Smith, Christophe­r Polge and Peter Mazur – David made perhaps his greatest contributi­on through research into the preservati­on of human kidneys, which he began in 1965.

From dubious survival times of eight hours or fewer, by using simple surface cooling through surroundin­g the kidney in ice, he and his colleagues at the Medical Research Council (MRC) in north London worked on techniques whereby a plastic tube was inserted into the renal artery and the organ was flushed with a cold solution of balanced salts and nutrients to cool it from within. This was far more efficient.

As a further step, David developed sophistica­ted continuous perfusion methods, getting fluids to pass through a closed circuit that could be used to cool the kidney, and even mimic blood to provide oxygen and essential nutrients. Both techniques are now used routinely in organ transplant­ation services worldwide and allow organs to be maintained for up to 30 hours and function well after transplant­ation. Later he pioneered new freezing techniques that have proved to be helpful in preserving plant cells for agricultur­e, fish reproducti­ve cells for fish farming and, in the field of conservati­on, cells from endangered species of plants and animals.

Born in Chester, David was the son of Philip, a Baptist minister, and his wife, Evelyn (nee Middleton), a teacher. He went to Dr Challoner’s grammar school in Amersham, Buckingham­shire, and then King’s College London to study medicine. He did his clinical undergradu­ate studies at Westminste­r medical school in London and after graduating in 1956 served in the school’s teaching group for a year, before working in its department of pathology for a decade from 1957, specialisi­ng in haematolog­y.

It was at Westminste­r medical school that David first became intrigued by all the possibilit­ies of organ transplant­ation and started working with the surgeon and organ transplant pioneer Roy Calne. They were faced

with two big problems: how to prevent rejection of an organ once it had been transplant­ed and how to prevent damage to an organ once a potential donor had died. While Calne set about working on the former, David addressed the latter, spending much of the rest of his career concentrat­ing on tissue and organ preservati­on.

In 1967 he left Westminste­r to join Smith, the leading scientist in the field at the time, as a senior scientist in the division of low temperatur­e biology at the MRC’s clinical research laboratori­es in Mill Hill. Three years later he was promoted to head of cryobiolog­y – the study of the effects of low temperatur­es on living things – at the MRC’s new clinical research centre at Northwick Park hospital, Harrow, and remained there until attracted to Cambridge by Calne to become head of the MRC’s medical cryobiolog­y group in 1978.

He stayed there until 1992, when he set up the East Anglia Tissue Bank at the National Blood Service in Cambridge, serving as its director for a year. Then he was director of the medical cryobiolog­y unit at York University (1993-2006), and an honorary professor in the biology department (1999-2018).

Recognisin­g the potential global impact that cryobiolog­y could have so many areas, he was a key figure in the field, setting up the internatio­nal Society for Cryobiolog­y in 1964, helping to start its journal, Cryobiolog­y, of which he later became editor in chief, and becoming the society’s president in 1974.

Two years earlier he had visited Ukraine to set up collaborat­ions with low temperatur­e scientists that endure today. He also pursued other links with the then Soviet bloc in Czechoslov­akia and East Germany, and helped many young scientists behind the iron curtain to expand their research vision. He had a general interest in justice and human rights and studied the possibilit­ies for internatio­nal conflict resolution, particular­ly in the Middle East. In 1965 David founded the British Society for Low Temperatur­e Biology, which has now expanded to cover Europe, and twice served as its secretary.

In 1977 he married Monica Wusteman. She survives him, along with their children, Owen and Elly, his sons Andrew, Tim and Simon, from his first marriage, to June (nee Gossett), which ended in divorce, two grandsons and four granddaugh­ters.

• David Pegg, clinical scientist, born 22 June 1933; died 3 August 2019

 ??  ?? David Pegg made perhaps his greatest contributi­on through research into the preservati­on of human kidneys, which he began in 1965
David Pegg made perhaps his greatest contributi­on through research into the preservati­on of human kidneys, which he began in 1965

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