Tag Archives: Transplanted

Two lungs transplanted in Philly were likely carrying Legionnaires’ disease, the first case of its kind – The Philadelphia Inquirer

  1. Two lungs transplanted in Philly were likely carrying Legionnaires’ disease, the first case of its kind The Philadelphia Inquirer
  2. Donated organs likely caused Legionnaires’ disease in 2 lung transplant recipients: CDC ABC News
  3. Transplanted lungs likely spread deadly Legionella infection to two recipients, study says CNN
  4. Two people saved by lung transplants from donor who drowned develop deadly water-borne disease… The US Sun
  5. Legionnaires Disease in Lung Transplant Recipients Likely From Donor Medpage Today
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Surgeons at NYU Langone transplanted pig hearts into two brain-dead humans

Earlier this summer, physicians at NYU Langone were able to successfully transplant pig hearts into two recently-deceased humans. The medical team performed the procedures on June 16 and July 6, using special pig hearts that were genetically modified to be more acceptable for transplantation into a human body. Both the bodies were donated by recently deceased individuals and were placed on ventilator support so the efficacy of the pig hearts could be measured more accurately.

The study arrives as the field of xenotransplantation — or the act of transferring organs from one species to another — is under increased scrutiny. The first person to undergo a pig heart transplant this year, of what scientists believe was an adverse reaction to a drug to prevent rejection. The heart also contained DNA with a pig virus. Since the incident, the medical community has called for more meaningful research on the subject, as well as better safety protocols. Meanwhile, the FDA is considering approval of clinical trials for pig heart transplantation in humans, the Wall Street Journal reported last month.

Both human subjects — a 72-year-old Navy veteran and a 64-year-old retired New York City teacher — were monitored for three days before being taken off life support. Neither heart needed any outside support and functioned normally, which researchers are seeing as a promising sign for future research. Despite the NYU experiment’s positive outcome, surgeons cautioned that much more research is needed before pig heart transplants can be a viable alternative for people with heart disease.

“This is not a one-and-done situation. This is going to be years of learning what’s important and what’s not important for this to work,” NYU’s Dr. Robert Montgomery the Associated Press.

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Genetically modified pig heart transplanted into deceased recipient, researchers say

The procedure was the first of its kind and represents an advance in efforts to determine whether organs in non-human animals can be modified and successfully used in humans in need of a transplant.

The 72-year-old recipient, Lawrence Kelly of Pennsylvania, had been declared brain-dead. His family donated his body for the study, which aimed to investigate how well the modified pig heart worked in a deceased human’s body.

After Kelly’s transplant in June, the research team repeated the procedure with another deceased recipient, 64-year-old Alva Capuano of New York City, in early July.

Dr. Robert Montgomery, director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute, said the procedures allowed for more in-depth study of how well the recipients’ bodies tolerated the pig hearts.

“We can do much more frequent monitoring and really sort of understand the biology and fill in all of the unknowns,” he said.

He added that their study was unique because they attempted to emulate real-world conditions by, for example, not using experimental devices and medications.

The researchers are working on publishing further details of the study.

‘He went out a hero’

Researchers traveled out of state to procure the heart, which had genetic modifications aimed at a number of factors, like modulating the organ’s growth and reducing the chance that the recipient’s immune system would reject it.

The flight meant the team could replicate the conditions of a typical heart transplant, said Dr. Nader Moazami, surgical director of heart transplantation at NYU Langone Health.

“It was about an hour and 15 minute flight from New York, which is typical of the distance that we take hearts for clinical transplantation,” said Moazami, who performed the transplant.

The heart went to Kelly, a Navy veteran who was declared brain-dead after a car crash. Kelly’s fiancee, Alice Michael, authorized the donation of his body to research.

“They were going to take his liver, and they couldn’t find a recipient. And then New York University called me with this research thing. And I automatically said yes, because I know he would have wanted to do it. He loved to help people,” she said.

“When they asked me, I didn’t have to think twice about it. I just automatically said yes, because I knew it was groundbreaking research, and I know he would have wanted it. It was hard because I had to wait to bury him. But in the long run, maybe he can help a lot of people.

“He was a hero in life, and he went out a hero,” Michael said.

After the transplant, the researchers conducted tests for three days to monitor how well the heart was accepted, while the recipient’s body was kept alive using machinery including ventilation.

“No signs of early rejection were observed and the heart functioned normally with standard post-transplant medications and without additional mechanical support,” the medical center said in a news release.

Additionally, the researchers said they found no signs of infection with porcine cytomegalovirus (pCMV), which experts have been concerned could pose an obstacle to using pig organs in human recipients.

A new method for transplant research

Testing how well an organ transplantation works using the donated body of a deceased person is a new method, Moazami said. The first use of this technique for research happened in September, when a team at NYU Langone led by Montgomery transplanted a kidney from a genetically modified pig into a deceased human.

Although the study represents a step forward, Moazami said, there is still work to be done before such a procedure is made broadly available outside a research setting.

“There’s still a long way to go before we go from here to clinical transplantation to support a patient in the longer term,” he said. “There’s still many, many, many questions that need to be answered.”

One important limitation was the length of the study, he said; the organ and recipient were evaluated for only 72 hours after the transplant. Additionally, there could be important differences in how deceased human bodies respond to the procedure, compared with living humans. More research will be needed to determine how transplant recipients would fare in the long term.

“We thought that in 72 hours, we could learn all the things that we would learn if we had extended this a little bit more,” Moazami said, noting that the short time frame limited the expense of the study and allowed the recipient’s body to be returned to his family quicker.

“We thought that 72 hours was a reasonable amount of period for our short-term study, to understand all the things that we needed — that three days versus five days versus seven days, wouldn’t make a difference. Would three days versus one month make a difference? Yes, absolutely. But at this stage, that would have been very, very difficult to pull off.”

Transplantation of animal organs into humans also raises an array of other ethical questions such as whether the benefits of using a modified pig heart outweigh the risks that a patient would face if they instead waited for a human organ to become available.

Personal connection and a new frontier

For Montgomery, the research has a personal side. He is a recipient of a human heart transplant, and he said the difficulty in securing a transplant is part of what motivates his work.

“During my illness, it became clear to me that this paradigm is not working. It’s a failing paradigm, and that we need a renewable resource, an alternative source of organs, that doesn’t require someone to die in order for someone else to live,” he said.

“My whole illness was all about informing me about the reality of that and changing the way I think, not that it’s not important to continue to do what we’re doing, but we’ve got to move this in a completely different direction.”

Generally, demand for organ transplantations far exceeds the supply of donor organs available in the United States. As of July 7, there are 106,074 people on the organ transplant waiting list, with 3,442 on the heart waiting list. On average, 17 people die on the organ transplant waitlist every day.

Moazami suggested that transplants from animals might someday be useful in the pediatric setting, where patients can face even greater challenges getting a human organ transplant in time. Animal organs could be used as a “bridge,” buying time before a more optimal human organ becomes available.

“Perhaps the best way to study this is maybe use it as a bridge to a human transplant, if you will, so that any patient who is in need of an organ would get this heart with the caveat that when a human heart becomes available that matches the recipient, we swap it out again,” Moazami said.

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First person with pig heart transplanted died from heart failure, doctors say

The first person to receive a heart transplant from a pig did not die due to his body rejecting the organ, according to doctors at the University of Maryland.

“We saw a thickening and later stiffening of the heart muscle leading to diastolic heart failure, which means the heart muscle was not able to relax and fill the heart with blood as it is supposed to,” said Dr. Bartley Griffith, who is also the Clinical Director of the Cardiac Xenotransplantation Program at UMSOM.

Despite the new heart failing, doctors believe there were still positives in the scientific process.

“We are very encouraged by this finding, and it suggests that the genetically-modified pig heart and the experimental drug we used to prevent rejection worked effectively in tandem to demonstrate that xenotransplants can potentially save future lives,” said study co-leader Dr. Muhammad M. Mohiuddin,

David Bennett, 57, received the pig heart transplant because he was too sick to receive a human heart transplant.

Before his surgery in January, he said, “I want to live. I know it’s a shot in the dark, but it’s my last choice.”

Bennett’s surgery showed for the first time a gene-edited animal heart can function in the human body without immediate rejection.

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U.S. man with transplanted genetically modified pig heart dies

March 9 (Reuters) – A 57-year-old man with terminal heart disease who made history as the first person to receive a genetically modified pig’s heart died on Tuesday at the University of Maryland Medical Center (UMMC), the hospital said.

David Bennett received the transplant on Jan 7. read more

His condition began deteriorating several days ago, the hospital said in a statement on Wednesday, and he was given “compassionate palliative care” after it became clear that he would not recover.

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Bennett “wasn’t able to overcome what turned out to be the devastating debilitation” caused by the heart failure he experienced before the transplant, Dr. Bartley Griffith, director of the UMCC cardiac transplant program, said in a videotaped statement.

The transplanted heart functioned “beautifully,” Griffith said.

Bennett was able to communicate with his family during his final hours, the hospital said.

Bennett first came to UMMC as a patient in October and was placed on a heart-lung bypass machine, but was deemed ineligible for a conventional heart transplant.

After Bennett received a pig heart that had been modified to prevent rejection with the use of new gene editing tools, his son called the procedure “a miracle.”

For Bennett, the procedure was his last option.

“Before consenting to receive the transplant, Mr Bennett was fully informed of the procedure’s risks, and that the procedure was experimental with unknown risks and benefits,” the hospital said.

Researchers have long considered pigs to be a potential source of organs for transplants because they are anatomically similar to humans in many ways. Prior efforts at pig-to-human transplants had failed because of genetic differences that caused organ rejection or viruses that posed an infection risk.

“The demonstration that it was possible – that we were able to take a genetically engineered organ and watch it function flawlessly for nine weeks, is pretty positive in terms of the potential for this therapy,” Griffith said.

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Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru and Nancy Lapid in New York; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Bill Berkrot, Caroline Humer and Robert Birsel

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Pig Kidney Successfully Transplanted Into a Human Patient For The First Time Ever

With over a hundred thousand people waiting for an organ transplant in the US alone, scientists are racing to find options besides human donors. Now for the first time, a pig kidney has been successfully transplanted into a person.

 

When we say “successfully”, it was only tested for 54 hours in a human patient – a patient who was already brain dead and being kept alive artificially. But as far as the transplant team could see, the kidney was connected and functioning normally during that time.

Technically, this is known as xenotransplantation, or the transplanting of tissues or organs from one species to another. If the work pioneered here can be developed, pigs could provide an abundance of organs suitable for use in people who need them. Currently, an average of 17 people die on transplant waiting lists per day in the US.

The operation to attach the kidney. (Joe Carrotta/NYU Langone Health)

“This is a huge breakthrough,” Dorry Segev, professor of transplant surgery at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, who was not involved in the research, told the New York Times. “It’s a big, big deal.”

There are still plenty of hurdles to overcome, including regulatory approval, but using organs from other animals in this way could also help the hundreds of thousands of people who aren’t considered at risk enough to get a transplant, but who have to deal with demanding kidney dialysis procedures.

 

Organs from pigs have long been considered as potentially suitable for humans, but pig cells include a sugar called alpha-gal, which triggers an immediate rejection by the human body. In this case, the pig had been genetically engineered to not produce alpha-gal.

While the pig kidney was kept outside of the body of the patient, it was observed to be doing its job during the operation: that is, filtering out waste products from the blood and producing urine.

“It’s even better than I’d hoped,” surgeon Robert Montgomery, who led the transplant at NYU Langone Health in New York City, told USA Today.

As yet, there’s no peer-reviewed scientific report of the operation, but we can be cautiously optimistic. Experts say trials with pig kidneys on critically ill humans – patients with no real other options left – could happen within two years.

There are ethical concerns to consider though. While the family of the human patient in this test gave their consent to it, not everyone is comfortable with the idea of breeding animals specifically to harvest their organs.

What might make organs from pigs more acceptable than organs from other animals – such as monkeys – is that pigs are already bred for food. They have large litters, short gestation periods, and organs that are similar to the ones we have.

We’re already using pig skin grafts for burns and pig heart valves in humans, and experiments have already been carried out with pig hearts in baboons, so there is something of a precedent. Expect to hear much more about the potential of using pig organs inside humans in the years to come.

“This is an important step forward in realizing the promise of xenotransplantation, which will save thousands of lives each year in the not-too-distant future,” Martine Rothblatt, the chief executive of United Therapeutics – the company that genetically engineered the pig – told The Guardian.

 

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