USA TODAY US Edition

Recipient of 1st pig-kidney transplant dies

Family thankful for extra 7 weeks spent with him

- Karen Weintraub

Richard Slayman, the first person to ever receive a kidney from a pig, has died, according to Massachuse­tts General Hospital, where the transplant was performed in March.

In a statement late Saturday, the transplant team said they “have no indication” Slayman’s death was the result of the transplant, which the hospital had heralded as a major scientific achievemen­t.

Slayman, 62, a systems manager for the Massachuse­tts Department of Transporta­tion, had already endured a transplant with a human kidney that had to be removed because of complicati­ons and was struggling with threetimes-a-week dialysis when he agreed to the experiment­al pig-kidney procedure.

When they announced that surgery had been successful, the Massachuse­tts General team said such animal-to-human transplant­s, known as xenotransp­lantation, offer the possibilit­y of solving the human organ shortage and a potential option for the hundreds of thousands of Americans suffering on dialysis.

Slayman appeared to be recovering well. He walked within a few days of the March 16 procedure and was released from the hospital April 3.

The hospital’s Saturday statement included comments from family members, saying they were “deeply saddened” by his passing but grateful for the extra seven weeks they had with Slayman.

They appreciate­d knowing his participat­ion in the research offered inspiratio­n to others.

“Millions of people worldwide have come to know Rick’s story. We felt – and still feel – comforted by the optimism he provided patients desperatel­y waiting for a transplant,” the statement said, in part.

Massachuse­tts General transplant team members, some of whom had treated Slayman for years, praised his generosity and kindness and described him as a “beacon of hope” for other patients.

“We are deeply grateful for his trust and willingnes­s to advance the field of xenotransp­lantation,” the transplant team said.

Two patients who received pig hearts at the University of Maryland Medical Center also died within two months of their procedures in 2022 and 2023.

A woman who received a pig kidney at NYU Langone Health on April 4 continues to recover. Her heart and kidney are “functionin­g optimally,” Dr. Robert Montgomery, who directs the NYU Langone Transplant Institute, said in a statement to USA TODAY.

“While she remains under intensive care, we see progress after her long history of difficult health challenges,” Montgomery said. “We hope to transition her to rehab in the next few weeks so we can get her back home to her family.”

The pig organs used for transplant come from animals that are gene-edited to make their organs less likely to be rejected by the human immune system. Rejection, which is common among human-to-human transplant­s, likely caused the death of one of the heart transplant patients, who died six weeks after surgery. No rejection was evident in the other two.

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