Khaleej Times

9-year-old Dubai kid gets kidney transplant

- Asma Ali Zain Times asmaalizai­n@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — Nine-year-old Bana Nizar Hassan from Sudan has become the first child to receive a kidney transplant in Dubai.

Bana received a kidney from a deceased adult patient from Abu Dhabi after a five-hour-long surgery done in mid-October.

The surgery was performed at Al Jalila Children’s Speciality Hospital by a joint medical team from the hospital and the Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences (MBRU).

The team was led by MBRU’s transplant surgeons Dr David Hickey, professor of surgery, and Dr Farhad Janahi, assistant professor of surgery.

“Bana was on a transplant list for long since she had end-stage kidney failure,” Dr Janahi told Khaleej

on Sunday. “She was about to go on dialysis.”

Bana, a UAE resident, was born with just one kidney — a condition called renal agenesis, which affects around one in 1,000 children — and was being treated with medication at the children’s hospital. She was facing eventual dialysis or transplant.

Bana was given the kidney of an adult after a complete match was done. “It was a bit of a challenge to transplant an adult’s kidney in a child but we did it successful­ly,” said Dr Janahi.

With such a transplant, the function of the new kidney is expected to last between 15 and 20 years. “She is on anti-rejection medicines now and is doing well at home,” he said.

A total of nine government and health authoritie­s in Dubai and Abu Dhabi worked together seamlessly to ensure that the kidney from a deceased donor in Abu Dhabi was transplant­ed within the necessary 12-hour window.

In addition to Al Jalila Children’s and the MBRU, the Dubai Healthcare City Authority (DHCA), the Ministry of Health and Prevention and its National Transplant Committee, Al Jalila Foundation, the Abu Dhabi Police, the Abu Dhabi Health Services Co., Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, and the Sheikh Khalifa Medical City were also involved.

The lead surgeon, Dr Hickey, former director of the National Kidney and Pancreas Transplant Programme in Ireland, has performed over 2,000 transplant­s, trained transplant surgeons from around the world, and published over 130 peer-reviewed scientific papers.

Dr Abdulla Al Khayat, CEO of Al Jalila Children’s, said: “We have just witnessed a defining moment in the history of Dubai’s paediatric healthcare system and Al Jalila Children’s is proud to have become a contributo­r to that history.

“Apart from this being an incredible medical achievemen­t, what we’ve seen is exemplary cooperatio­n between 10 different entities in Dubai and Abu Dhabi that came together in virtually no time to make this surgery possible,” he said.

“This is the first of many to come and we are on track to ensuring that Dubai becomes the hub of paediatric healthcare in the region by contributi­ng to the UAE’s 2021 vision for the health sector,” he said.

“While we celebrate this milestone, we must not forget the kindness and generosity of the donor that made it possible for Bana to start life anew,” he added.

Dr Amer Sharif, vice-chancellor of the MBRU and CEO of DHCA’s education sector, said: “It is a testament to the efforts that have gone into the MBRU transplant programme, which was launched in 2016.”

Nizar Hassan Yousif, father of young Bana, said: “We have been suffering for nine years now — we knew that there was something wrong with my daughter’s kidneys before she was even born.”

“What we feel now is beyond words; it feels like we all have a new life to start together. It is also extremely overwhelmi­ng for us to see so many people from different

This sends a message that we have the capability to perform such life-saving surgeries here in the country.”

Dr Farhad Janahi, assistant professor of surgery, MBRU

Bana’s first smile after the operation was the most precious moment in my life, and I would like to dedicate her first smile to our gracious donor and his family.” Nizar Hassan Yousif, father of Bana

entities across the UAE come together to treat my baby; thank you is not enough for them,” he said.

“Bana’s first smile after the operation was the most precious moment in my life, and I would like to dedicate her first smile to our gracious donor and his family, God bless them all,” the father added.

Dr Janahi said that the UAE had an active transplant programme with many other patients on the waiting lists. “This should also raise public awareness and send a message that we have the capability to perform such life-saving surgeries here in the country,” he said.

Al Jalila Children’s is a 200-bed, state-of-the-art paediatric facility that opened its doors two years ago.

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 ??  ?? The family of Bana Nizar Hassan with the lead surgeons of the kidney transplant. — Supplied photo
The family of Bana Nizar Hassan with the lead surgeons of the kidney transplant. — Supplied photo

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