China: Surgeons conduct pig-to-human lung transplant

The genetically modified pig lung remained functional for nine days inside a brain-dead human patient. Scientists believe xenotransplantation – cross-species transplants – could alleviate the organ shortage crisis.

After this xenotransplantation of a pig kidney in 2024, researchers in China have repeated the procedure with a pig lung.Image: picture alliance / Xinhua News Agency

Surgeons in China have conducted a successful pig-to-human lung transplant which they say demonstrated the feasibility of the procedure – even if substantial further tests are still required.

According to scientists at the National Clinical Research Center for Respiratory Disease in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, the pig lung, which was transplanted into a brain-dead human recipient, “maintained viability and functionality” for 216 hours (nine days) without becoming infected or being rejected by its host.

What is xenotransplantation?

The transplantation of organs across species is known as xenotransplantation and has been touted as a potential solution to the global organ shortage crisis.

According to the Guangzhou study, advancements have recently been made in heart and kidney xenotransplantation from pigs to humans, but lungs present “distinct challenges” due to their “anatomical and physiological complexity.”

Among other things, the direct contact of the lung with the outside air naturally increases the risk of infection.

But the genetically altered lung transplanted from the 22-month-old, 70-kilogram, male, Chinese Bama Xiang pig to the 39-year-old male human patient survived and functioned for over a week of monitoring.

Source : https://www.dw.com/en/china-surgeons-conduct-pig-to-human-lung-transplant/a-73764713

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