San Diego Union-Tribune

PIG HEART IS TRANSPLANT­ED INTO HUMAN

- BY RONI CARYN RABIN

A 57-year-old man with life-threatenin­g heart disease has received a heart from a geneticall­y modified pig, a groundbrea­king procedure that offers hope to hundreds of thousands of patients with failing organs.

It is the first successful transplant of a pig’s heart into a human being. The eight-hour operation took place in Baltimore on Friday, and the patient, David Bennett Sr. of Maryland, was doing well Monday, according to surgeons at the University of Maryland Medical Center.

“It creates the pulse; it creates the pressure; it is his heart,” said Dr. Bartley Griffith, director of the cardiac transplant program at the medical center, who performed the operation.

“It’s working, and it looks normal. We are thrilled, but we don’t know what tomorrow will bring us. This has never been done before.”

Last year, some 41,354 Americans received a transplant­ed organ, more than half of them receiving kidneys, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing, a nonprofit that coordinate­s the nation’s organ procuremen­t efforts.

But there is an acute shortage of organs, and about a dozen people on the lists die each day. Some 3,817 Americans received human donor hearts last year as replacemen­ts, more than ever before, but the potential demand is still higher.

Scientists have worked feverishly to develop pigs whose organs would not be rejected by the human body, research accelerate­d in the past decade by new gene editing and cloning technologi­es. The heart transplant comes just months after surgeons in New York successful­ly attached the kidney of a geneticall­y engineered pig to a brain-dead person.

Researcher­s hope procedures like this will usher in a new era in medicine in the future when replacemen­t organs are no longer in short supply for the more than half a million Americans who are waiting for kidneys and other organs.

“This is a watershed event,” said Dr. David Klassen, chief medical officer of the United Network for Organ Sharing and a transplant physician. “Doors are starting to open that will lead, I believe, to major changes in how we treat organ failure.”

But he added that there were many hurdles to overcome before such a procedure could be broadly applied, noting that rejection of organs occurs even when a well-matched human donor kidney is transplant­ed.

“Events like these can be dramatized in the press, and it’s important to maintain perspectiv­e,” Klassen said. “It takes a long time to mature a therapy like this.”

Bennett decided to gamble on the experiment­al treatment because he would have died without a new heart, had exhausted other treatments and was too sick to qualify for a human donor

heart, family members and doctors said.

His prognosis is uncertain. Bennett is still connected to a heart-lung bypass machine, which was keeping him alive before the operation, but that is not unusual for a new heart transplant recipient, experts said.

The new heart is functionin­g and already doing most of the work, and his doctors said he could be taken off the machine today. Bennett is being closely monitored for signs that his body is rejecting the new organ, but the first 48 hours, which are critical, passed without incident.

He is also being monitored for infections, including porcine retrovirus, a pig virus that may be transmitte­d to humans, although the risk is considered low.

“It was either die or do this transplant,” Bennett said before the surgery, according to officials at the University of Maryland Medical Center. “I want to live. I know it’s a shot in the dark, but it’s my last choice.”

Griffith said he first broached the treatment in mid-December, a “memorable” and “pretty strange” conversati­on.

“I said, ‘We can’t give you a human heart; you don’t qualify. But maybe we can use one from an animal, a pig,” Griffith recalled. “It’s never been done before, but we think we can do it.’ ”

“I wasn’t sure he was understand­ing me,” Griffith added. “Then he said, ‘Well, will I oink?’ ”

Xenotransp­lantation, the process of grafting or transplant­ing organs or tissues from animals to humans, has a long history. Efforts to use the blood and skin of animals go back hundreds of years.

In the 1960s, chimpanzee kidneys were transplant­ed into some human patients, but the longest a recipient lived was nine months. In 1983, a baboon heart was transplant­ed into an infant known as Baby Fae, but she died 20 days later.

Pigs offer advantages over primates for organ procuremen­ts because they are easier to raise and achieve adult human size in six months. Pig heart valves are routinely transplant­ed into humans, and some patients with diabetes have received porcine pancreas cells. Pig skin has also been used as a temporary graft for burn patients.

Two newer technologi­es — gene editing and cloning — have yielded geneticall­y altered pig organs less likely to be rejected by humans. Pig hearts have been transplant­ed successful­ly into baboons by Dr. Muhammad Mohiuddin, a professor of surgery at University of Maryland School of Medicine who establishe­d the cardiac xenotransp­lantation program with Griffith and is its scientific director. But safety concerns and fear of setting off a dangerous immune response that can be life-threatenin­g precluded their use in humans until recently.

Dr. Jay Fishman, associate director of the transplant­ation center at Massachuse­tts General Hospital, said that using pig organs provides the ability to perform genetic manipulati­ons, the time to carry out better screening for infectious diseases and the possibilit­y of a new organ at the time that the patient needs it.

The heart transplant­ed into Bennett came from a geneticall­y altered pig provided by Revivicor, a regenerati­ve medicine company based in Blacksburg, Va.

The pig had 10 genetic modificati­ons. Four genes were knocked out, or inactivate­d, including one that encodes a molecule that causes an aggressive human rejection response.

A growth gene was also inactivate­d to prevent the pig’s heart from continuing to grow after it was implanted, said Mohiuddin, who, with Griffith, did much of the research leading up to the transplant.

In addition, six human genes were inserted into the genome of the donor pig — modificati­ons designed to make the porcine organs more tolerable to the human immune system.

The team used a new experiment­al drug developed in part by Mohiuddin and made by Kiniksa Pharmaceut­icals to suppress the immune system and prevent rejection. It also used a new machine perfusion device to keep the pig’s heart preserved until surgery.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion worked intensely toward the end of the year, giving the transplant surgeons an emergency authorizat­ion for the operation on New Year’s Eve.

The surgeons encountere­d a number of unexpected turns.

“The anatomy was a little squirrelly, and we had a few moments of ‘uh-oh’ and had to do some clever plastic surgery to make everything fit,” Griffith said. As the team removed the clamp restrictin­g blood supply to the organ, “the heart fired right up,” and “the animal heart began to squeeze.”

 ?? DR. BARTLEY GRIFFITH/UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE VIA AP ?? Dr. Bartley Griffith takes a selfie with patient David Bennett Sr. in Baltimore. In a medical first, doctors transplant­ed a pig heart into Bennett in a last-ditch effort to save his life, the University of Maryland Medical Center said Monday.
DR. BARTLEY GRIFFITH/UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE VIA AP Dr. Bartley Griffith takes a selfie with patient David Bennett Sr. in Baltimore. In a medical first, doctors transplant­ed a pig heart into Bennett in a last-ditch effort to save his life, the University of Maryland Medical Center said Monday.

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