Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery Samsung Medical Center Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine Seoul Republic of Korea
2. GenNBio Pyeongtaek‐Si Gyeonggi‐Do Republic of Korea
3. Optipharm Inc. Cheongju‐si Chungcheongbuk‐do Republic of Korea
4. Department of Pathology Asan Medical Center Ulsan University Medical School Seoul Republic of Korea
Abstract
AbstractXenotransplantation using pigs' liver offers a potentially alternative method to overcome worldwide donor shortage, or more importantly as a bridge to allotransplantation. However, it has been challenged by profound thrombocytopenia and fatal coagulopathy in non‐human primate models. Here we suggest that a left auxiliary technique can be a useful method to achieve extended survival of the xenograft. Fifteen consecutive liver xenotransplants were carried out in a pig‐to‐cynomolgus model. Right auxiliary technique was implemented in two cases, orthotopic in eight cases, and left auxiliary in five cases. None of the right auxiliary recipients survived after surgery due to hemorrhage during complex dissection between the primate's right lobe and inferior vena cava. Orthotopic recipients survived less than 7 days secondary to profound thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy. Two out of five left auxiliary xenotransplants survived more than 3 weeks without uncontrolled thrombocytopenia or anemia, with one of them surviving 34 days, the longest graft survival reported to date. Left auxiliary xenotransplant is a feasible approach in non‐human primate experiments, and the feared risk of thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy can be minimized. This may allow for longer evaluation of the xenograft and help better understand histopathological and immunological changes that occur following liver xenotransplantation.
Subject
Transplantation,Immunology
Cited by
1 articles.
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