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damaged lungs restored with live pig blood

THE ESSENTIAL

  • Connected to the blood supply of a live pig, lungs unfit for transplantation because too damaged regained their pulmonary function in 24 hours.

Like many other transplant operations, lung transplant does not escape the shortage of organs. The process is made all the more tricky by the fact that as soon as an individual dies, their lungs begin to deteriorate due to oxygen starvation and remain viable only within 6 to 8 hours of death. Eighty percent of the lungs offered for transplantation are thus unsuitable for transplantation because damaged, swollen or soggy with fluid.

A discovery led by researchers from the universities of Columbia and Vanderbilt (United States), and published in the journal Nature Medicine, could extend the life of explanted lungs up to 4 days after death and keep them functional.

A restoration of lung function in 24 hours

Working for eight years on a system for restoring damaged lungs, the research team had already succeeded, in 2017, in restoring the transverse circulation of lungs outside the body and, in 2019, in regenerating severely damaged pig lungs.

For this new trial, the researchers removed six lungs unfit for transplantation from deceased patients. Each lung was placed in a plastic box connected to an artificial respirator. Then, each lung was connected to a large vein from the neck of a live pig. Immunosuppressants were then added to the circulatory system consisting of the pig and the human lung.

After 24 hours of cross-circulation, the lungs were transformed: the lung cells were again able to supply oxygen.

The results look like science fiction: in 24 hours, the lungs seemed usable and laboratory tests confirmed that they had been revived ”, write the authors of the study in Nature Medicine.

Technology to refine

If more research is needed before this cross-circulation becomes a clinical reality, these initial results are particularly encouraging and could significantly increase the number of viable lungs for transplantation.

As a surgeon specializing in lung transplants, I have seen many patients not receiving the lung transplants they so desperately need. I find this work intriguing and I hope this technology will make more donor lungs available ”said Zachary Kon, director of the lung transplant program at NYU Langone Health, who was not involved in the study.

The results are all the more optimistic since the procedure does not seem to have any harmful effects on the pigs which were anesthetized. In a previous experiment, animals could even move around and feed while connected to the bloodstream.

The objective being, ultimately, that this transverse circulation is intra-human: a donor would then be able to restore with his own blood supply his dysfunctional lung.

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