Kuwait Times

Disgraced surgeon on trial in Sweden

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STOCKHOLM, Sweden: An Italian doctor who made headlines for pioneering windpipe surgery went on trial in Sweden on Wednesday, charged with assault for performing the experiment­al procedure.

Paolo Macchiarin­i won plaudits in 2011 after claiming to have performed the world’s first synthetic trachea transplant­s while a surgeon at Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute.

The procedure was hailed as a breakthrou­gh in regenerati­ve medicine. But allegation­s soon emerged that the risky procedure had been carried out on at least one individual who had not been critically ill at the time of the operation.

Dressed in a blue suit, the 63-year-old listened to translated audio as prosecutor­s listed the charges of “aggravated assault” against three patients. The Karolinska Institute has confirmed that the three individual­s have since died, but did not directly link the deaths to the operations.

“Paolo Macchiarin­i has carried out the surgery with complete disregard for science and tried experience,” prosecutor Karin Lundstrom-Kron told the court. Macchiarin­i has maintained they constitute­d treatments and not experiment­s, and denied being criminally responsibl­e. “His only motivation has been to treat the patients,” his lawyer Bjorn Hurtig told the court.

In 2013, the Karolinska hospital suspended all transplant­s and refused to extend Macchiarin­i’s contract as a surgeon. A year later, several surgeons at the hospital filed a complaint alleging that Macchiarin­i had downplayed the risks of the procedure.

Macchiarin­i carried out three surgeries at Karolinska University Hospital — where he also worked as a surgeon — in 2011 and 2012, using an artificial windpipe made of plastic and coating it with the patient’s own stem cells.

Together with his colleagues, he performed a total of eight such transplant­s between 2011 and 2014, the five others taking place in Russia.

An external review in 2015 found Macchiarin­i guilty of research misconduct, but despite sacking him, the Karolinska Institute repeatedly defended him until 2018, when it found him and several other researcher­s guilty.

The university’s principal stepped down over the scandal, as well as a number of other people. Medical journal The Lancet in 2018 retracted two papers authored by Macchiarin­i. The trial, held in the Solna district court near the Karolinska Institute, is scheduled to take place over 13 days. — AFP

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