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The Future of Transplantation

Jeffrey L. Platt, Marília Cascalho

2022New England Journal of Medicine24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Since 1902, animals have been studied and occasionally used as sources of organs for transplantation, usually when human organs were unavailable. Clinical organ xenotransplantation invariably failed, whereas clinical organ allotransplantation rose to become a primary treatment for failure of the heart, kidneys, liver, and lungs. Still, a shortage of human organs has limited organ transplantation and motivates ongoing efforts to advance xenotransplantation into clinical practice. Griffith and colleagues1 now report in the Journal the transplantation of a heart from a pig into a patient who had severe cardiac failure. The pig was genetically engineered to disrupt certain genes, including those . . .

Topics & Concepts

XenotransplantationAllotransplantationEconomic shortageTransplantationOrgan transplantationMedicineIntensive care medicineHeart transplantationOrgan donationInternal medicineGovernment (linguistics)LinguisticsPhilosophyXenotransplantation and immune responseOrgan Transplantation Techniques and OutcomesOrgan Donation and Transplantation
The Future of Transplantation | Litcius