Litcius/Paper detail

Xenotransplantation: A New Era

Amber Carrier, Anjali Verma, Muhammad M. Mohiuddin, Manuel Pascual, Yannick D. Müller, Alban Longchamp, Chandra Bhati, Léo H. Bühler, Daniel G. Maluf, Raphaël Meier

2022Frontiers in Immunology78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Organ allotransplantation has now reached an impassable ceiling inherent to the limited supply of human donor organs. In the United States, there are currently over 100,000 individuals on the national transplant waiting list awaiting a kidney, heart, and/or liver transplant. This is in contrast with only a fraction of them receiving a living or deceased donor allograft. Given the morbidity, mortality, costs, or absence of supportive treatments, xenotransplant has the potential to address the critical shortage in organ grafts. Last decade research efforts focused on creation of donor organs from pigs with various genes edited out using CRISPR technologies and utilizing non-human primates for trial. Three groups in the United States have recently moved forward with trials in human subjects and obtained initial successful results with pig-to-human heart and kidney xenotransplantation. This review serves as a brief discussion of the recent progress in xenotransplantation research, particularly as it concerns utilization of porcine heart, renal, and liver xenografts in clinical practice.

Topics & Concepts

XenotransplantationAllotransplantationEconomic shortageMedicineIntensive care medicineHuman heartTransplantationOrgan donationClinical trialKidneySurgeryInternal medicineGovernment (linguistics)LinguisticsPhilosophyXenotransplantation and immune responseOrgan Transplantation Techniques and OutcomesAnimal Genetics and Reproduction
Xenotransplantation: A New Era | Litcius