The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Baby gets heart transplant with a twist to fight rejection

- By Lauran Neergaard

Duke University doctors say a baby is thriving after a first-ofits-kind heart transplant — one that came with a bonus technique to try to help prevent rejection of the new organ.

The thymus plays a critical role in building the immune system. Doctors have wondered if implanting some thymus tissue that matched a donated organ might help it survive without the recipient needing toxic antireject­ion medicines.

Easton Sinnamon of Asheboro, North Carolina, received his unique transplant last summer when he was 6 months old. But Duke waited to announce it until Monday after doctors learned the specially processed thymus implants appear to be functionin­g like they’d hoped — producing immune cells that don’t treat the tot’s new heart like foreign tissue.

Doctors eventually will try weaning Easton off the immunesupp­ressing drugs required after a transplant, said Dr. Joseph Turek, Duke’s chief of pediatric cardiac surgery.

The research is in very early stages and just one possible method scientists are testing in hopes of inducing what’s called immune tolerance to a transplant.

But Turek says if it works, it could be attempted with other organ transplant­s, not just the heart.

Easton was a candidate for the experiment­al transplant because he had two separate health problems. He was born with some heart defects that surgeries right after birth failed to solve. And he suffered recurrent infections that doctors eventually realized meant his own thymus wasn’t working properly.

Some babies are born without a thymus, which stimulates developmen­t of part of the immune system known as T cells. Separately, Duke researcher­s had been working with Enzyvant Therapeuti­cs to develop lab-grown implants of donated thymus tissue to treat that rare disorder.

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