National Post

‘MORE HAIR THAN WHEN I WAS 21’

U.S doctors perform first skull and scalp transplant to help cancer patient.

- By Marilynn Marchione

Texas doctors said Thursday they have done the world’s first partial skull and scalp transplant to help a man with a large head wound from cancer treatment.

The operation was carried out May 22 by surgeons from MD Anderson Cancer Center and Houston Methodist Hospital.

The recipient, Jim Boysen, a 55-year-old software developer from Austin, also received a new kidney and pancreas along with the scalp and skull grafts.

He said he was stunned at how well doctors matched him to a donor with similar skin and colouring.

“It’s kind of shocking, really, how good they got it. I will have way more hair than when I was 21,” Boysen joked.

Last year, doctors in the Netherland­s said they replaced most of a woman’s skull with a three-dimensiona­l printed plastic one.

The Texas operation is thought to be the first skull-scalp transplant from a human donor, as opposed to an artificial implant or a simple bone graft.

Boysen had a kidney-pancreas transplant in 1992 to treat diabetes he has had since age five and has been on drugs to prevent organ rejection. The immune suppressio­n drugs raise the risk of cancer, and he developed a rare type, leiomyosar­coma.

It can affect many types of smooth muscles, but in his case, it was the ones under the scalp that make hair stand on end.

Radiation therapy for the cancer destroyed part of his head, immune suppressio­n drugs kept his body from repairing the damage, and his transplant­ed organs were starting to fail — “a perfect storm that made the wound not heal,” Boysen said.

Yet doctors could not perform a new kidney-pancreas transplant as long as he had an open wound. That’s when Dr. Jesse Selber, a reconstruc­tive plastic surgeon at MD Anderson, thought of giving him a new partial skull and scalp at the same time as new organs.

Houston Methodist, which has transplant expertise, partnered on the venture. It took 18 months for the organ procuremen­t organizati­on, Life-Gift, to find the right donor, who provided all organs for Boysen and was not identified.

Boysen “had a wound that was basically all the way through his skull to his brain,” Selber said.

In a 15-hour operation by about a dozen doctors and 40 other health workers, Boysen was given a cap-shaped skull graft, and a scalp graft starting

I will have way more hair than when I was 21

above his forehead, extending across the top of his head and over its crown. It ends a few centimetre­s above one ear and a little more above the other.

Any surgery around the brain is difficult. This one required delicate work to remove and replace a large part of the skull and re-establish a blood supply to keep the transplant viable.

“We had to connect small blood vessels about onesixteen­th of an inch thick. It’s done under an operating microscope with little stitches about half the thickness of a human hair, using tools like a jeweller would use to make a fine Swiss watch,” said Dr. Michael Klebuc, who led the Houston Methodist plastic surgery team.

The pancreas and kidney were transplant­ed after the head surgery.

Boysen said he already has felt some sensation in the new scalp.

“That kind of shocked the doctor. He was doing a test yesterday and I said, ‘ Ouch, I feel that.’ He kind of jumped back,” he said.

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 ?? Pat Sullivan /TheAssocia­ted Pres ?? James Boysen of Austin, Texas, says he was stunned at how well doctors matched him to
a donor with similar skin and colouring for his partial skull and scalp transplant.
Pat Sullivan /TheAssocia­ted Pres James Boysen of Austin, Texas, says he was stunned at how well doctors matched him to a donor with similar skin and colouring for his partial skull and scalp transplant.

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