A kidney grown in a genetically altered pig functions normally, scientists reported. The procedure may open the door to a renewable source of desperately needed organs.
Dr. Robert Montgomery is director of the N.Y.U.
Langone Transplant Institute in Manhattan. Genetically engineered pigs “could
potentially be a sustainable, renewable source of organs,” he said.
Surgeons in New York have successfully
attached a kidney grown in a genetically altered pig to a human patient and
found that the organ worked normally, a scientific breakthrough that one day
may yield a vast new supply of organs for severely ill patients.
Researchers have
long sought to grow organs in pigs that are suitable for transplantation into
humans. Technologies like cloning and genetic engineering have brought that
vision closer to reality in recent years, but testing these experimental organs
in humans has presented daunting ethical questions.
So surgeons at
N.Y.U. Langone Health took an astonishing step: With the family’s consent, they
attached the pig’s kidney to a brain-dead patient who was kept alive on a
ventilator, and then followed the body’s response while taking measures of the
kidney’s function. It is the first operation of its kind.
The researchers
tracked the results for just 54 hours, and many questions remained to be
answered about the long-term consequences of such an operation. The procedure
will not be available to patients any time soon, as there are significant
medical and regulatory hurdles to overcome.
Still, experts in the field hailed the surgery as a milestone.
“This is a huge
breakthrough,” said Dr. Dorry Segev, a professor of transplant surgery at Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine who was not involved in the research. “It’s a big,
big deal.”
A steady supply
of organs from pigs — which could eventually include hearts, lungs and livers —
would offer a lifeline to the more than 100,000 Americans currently on
transplant waiting lists, including the 90,240 who need a kidney. Twelve people
on the waiting lists die each day.
An even larger
number of Americans with kidney failure — more than a half million — depend on
grueling dialysis treatments to survive. In large part because of the scarcity
of human organs, the vast majority of dialysis patients do not qualify for
transplants, which are reserved for those most likely to thrive after the
procedure.
The surgery was
first reported by USA Today on Tuesday. The research has not yet been
peer-reviewed nor published in a medical journal.
A surgical team at the hospital in New York examined a pig kidney attached to the body of a brain-dead recipient for any signs of rejection.Credit...Joe Carrotta/N.Y.U. Langone Health, via Associated Press
The transplanted kidney was
obtained from a pig genetically engineered to grow an organ unlikely to be
rejected by the human body. In a close approximation of an actual transplant
procedure, the kidney was attached to blood vessels in the patient’s upper leg,
outside the abdomen.
The organ started functioning normally, making urine and the waste product
creatinine “almost immediately,” according to Dr. Robert Montgomery, the
director of the N.Y.U. Langone Transplant Institute, who performed the
procedure in September.
Although the kidney was not implanted in the body, problems with so-called
xenotransplants — from animals like primates and pigs — usually occur at the
interface of the blood supply and the organ, where human blood flows through
pig vessels, experts said.
The fact that the organ functioned outside the body is a strong indication
that it will work in the body, Dr. Montgomery said.
“It was better than I think we even expected,” he said. “It just looked
like any transplant I’ve ever done from a living donor. A lot of kidneys from
deceased people don’t work right away, and take days or weeks to start. This
worked immediately.”
Last year, 39,717 residents of the United States received an organ
transplant, the majority of them — 23,401 — receiving kidneys, according to the
United Network for Organ Sharing, a nonprofit that coordinates the nation’s
organ procurement efforts.
Genetically engineered pigs
“could potentially be a sustainable, renewable source of organs — the solar and
wind of organ availability,” Dr. Montgomery said.
The prospect of raising pigs to harvest their organs for humans is bound to
raise questions about animal welfare and exploitation, though an estimated 100
million pigs already are killed in the United States each year for food.
“Pigs aren’t spare parts and should never be used as such just because
humans are too self-centered to donate their bodies to patients desperate for
organ transplants,” said a statement from the organization People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals, or PETA.
Among transplantation experts, reactions ranged from cautiously optimistic
to ebullient, though all acknowledged the procedure represented a sea change.
While some surgeons speculated that it could be just months before
genetically engineered pigs’ kidneys are transplanted into living human beings,
others said there was still much work to be done.
“This is really cutting-edge translational surgery and transplantation that
is on the brink of being able to do it in living human beings,” said Dr. Amy
Friedman, a former transplant surgeon and chief medical officer of LiveOnNY,
the organ procurement organization in the greater New York area.
The group was involved in the selection and identification of the
brain-dead patient receiving the experimental procedure. The patient was a registered
organ donor, and because the organs were not suitable for transplantation, the
patient’s family agreed to permit research to test the experimental transplant
procedure.
Dr. Friedman said she
envisioned using hearts, livers and other organs grown in pigs, as well. “It’s
truly mind-boggling to think of how many transplants we might be able to
offer,” she said, adding, “You’d have to breed the pigs, of course.”
Other experts were more reserved, saying they wanted to see whether the
results were reproducible and to review data collected by N.Y.U. Langone.
“There’s no question this is a tour de force, in that it’s hard to do and
you have to jump through a lot of hoops,” said Dr. Jay A. Fishman, associate
director of the transplantation center at Massachusetts General Hospital.
“Whether this particular study advances the field will depend on what data
they collected and whether they share it, or whether it is a step just to show
they can do it,” Dr. Fishman said. He urged humility “about what we know.”
Many hurdles remain before genetically engineered pigs’ organs can be used
in living human beings, said Dr. David Klassen, chief medical officer of the
United Network for Organ Sharing.
While he called the surgery “a watershed moment,” he warned that long-term
rejection of organs occurs even when the donor kidney is well-matched, and
“even when you’re not trying to cross species barriers.”
The kidney has functions in addition to clearing blood of toxins. And there
are concerns about pig viruses infecting recipients, Dr. Klassen said: “It’s a
complicated field, and to imagine that we know all of the things that are going
to happen and all the problems that will arise is naïve.”
Xenotransplantation, the
process of grafting or transplanting organs or tissues between different
species, has a long history. Efforts to use the blood and skin of animals in
humans go back hundreds of years.
In the 1960s, chimpanzee kidneys were transplanted into a small number of
human patients. Most died shortly afterward; the longest a patient lived was
nine months. In 1983, a baboon heart was transplanted into an infant girl known
as Baby Faye. She died 20 days later.
Pigs offered advantages over primates for organ procurement — they are
easier to raise, reach maturation faster, and achieve adult human size in six
months. Pig heart valves are routinely transplanted into humans, and some
patients with diabetes have received pig pancreas cells. Pig skin has also been
used as temporary grafts for burn patients.
The combination of two new technologies — gene editing and cloning — has
yielded genetically altered pig organs. Pig hearts and kidneys have been
transplanted successfully into monkeys and baboons, but safety concerns
precluded their use in humans.
“The field up to now has been stuck in the preclinical primate stage,
because going from primate to living human is perceived as a big jump,” Dr.
Montgomery said.
The kidney used in the new procedure was obtained by knocking out a pig
gene that encodes a sugar molecule that elicits an aggressive human rejection
response. The pig was genetically engineered by Revivicor and approved by the
Food and Drug Administration for use as a source for human therapeutics.
Dr. Montgomery and his team also transplanted the pig’s thymus, a gland
that is involved in the immune system, in an effort to ward off immune
reactions to the kidney.
After attaching the kidney to
blood vessels in the upper leg, the surgeons covered it with a protective
shield so they could observe it and take tissue samples over the 54-hour study
period.
Urine and creatinine levels were normal, Dr. Montgomery and his colleagues
found, and no signs of rejection were detected during more than two days of
observation.
“There didn’t seem to be any kind of incompatibility between the pig kidney
and the human that would make it not work,” Dr. Montgomery said. “There wasn’t
immediate rejection of the kidney.”
The long-term prospects are still unknown, he acknowledged. But “this allowed us to answer a really important question: Is there something that’s going to happen when we move this from a primate to a human that is going to be disastrous?”
The New York Times
Roni Caryn Rabin Oct. 19, 2021
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/19/health/kidney-transplant-pig-human.html
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