One Step Closer to Kidney Transplants From Pigs
Researchers are making great progress overcoming the problems that have long plagued attempts at xenotransplantation.

Nearly 107,000 Americans are waiting for a lifesaving organ transplant; 90,000 of them are hoping for a kidney. The demand for organs clearly exceeds the supply.
In October, transplant surgeons at New York University (NYU) took a small but significant step toward addressing this shortage with organs from other species. They transplanted a kidney from a pig that had been genetically modified to not express the carbohydrate alpha-gal, which occurs in all mammals except humans and other primates. Because infants develop antibodies to alpha-gal in response to gut microbiota, transplants from other mammals provoke a devastating immune rejection.
The NYU surgeons attached the modified pig kidney to blood vessels in a deceased woman's upper leg (with the permission of her family). Her bodily functions were maintained with a ventilator. Researchers observed the kidney for 54 hours. It functioned normally, producing urine and waste products like creatinine, with no signs of immune rejection.
In July 2021, a Massachusetts General Hospital transplant team reported the results of an experiment involving kidneys from pigs that had been genetically modified even more extensively. These pigs do not express alpha-gal or two other carbohydrates attacked by the human system, and they carry several human genes that regulate immune response and blood coagulation. The researchers transplanted kidneys from the pigs into macaque monkeys. While one died after two days, three others lived 135, 265, and 316 days.
These researchers are trying to overcome a problem that has long plagued attempts at xenotransplantation, or procedures involving human recipients but nonhuman tissues or organs. In the early 1960s, for example, Tulane University surgeon Keith Reemtsma transplanted chimpanzee kidneys into 13 patients. Most failed within four to eight weeks, although one lasted for nine months before the patient died. In 1985, Loma Linda University Medical Center heart surgeon Leonard Bailey transplanted a baboon heart into "Baby Fae," who had been born prematurely with a fatal heart defect. Acute immune rejection caused the heart to fail after 20 days.
University of Alabama transplant surgeons David Cooper and Hidetaka Hara suggested in a September EBioMedicine article that "patients who are unlikely to live long enough to receive a kidney from a deceased human donor would benefit from the opportunity of a period of dialysis-free support by a pig kidney." That would help perfect the use of animal organs for transplantation.
In 1995, Cambridge University transplant surgeon Roy Calne suggested that xenotransplantation "is just around the corner, but it may be a very long corner." The NYU results suggest scientists are getting closer to rounding it.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Am guessing that the growing welfare recipient class will soon be expected to provide harvestable organs for the progressive betters.
What do you think the progressive plans for COVID internment camps are about? Just one more export from china there.
Working Online from home and earns more than $15k every month. I have received $17000 last month by doing online work from home. Its an easy and simple job to do from home and even a little child can do this online and makes money. Everybody can get this job now and earns more dollars online by just copy and paste this website in browser and then follow instructions to get started right now. ═══►►► CLICK NOW
Hard to understand the shortage of kidneys given the fact that the average person is walking around with two of them but only needs one. Maybe if we thought about it hard enough maybe we could come up with some sort of incentive to persuade people to part with one of them.
Pig kidney transplants sounds offal.
I'm rooting for them.
I bet the recipient feels gilty.
I am creating an honest wage from home 1900 Dollars/week , that is wonderful, below a year gone i used to be unemployed during an atrocious economy. (cfg28) I convey God on a daily basis. I used to be endowed with these directions and currently it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with everybody.
Here is where I started…..... Visit Here
Start your work at home right now. Spend more time with your family and earn. Start bringing 85$/¬¬¬hr. just on a laptop. Very easy way to make your life happy and earning continuously. Last week my check was 24551$.pop over here this site…
……… Click Here
I'm not sure you're using the term deceased correctly. Definitely not clearly.
Let me know when we're a step closer to the commenting software here taking care of itself.
I’ll let you know when they make a cream for bitchiness.
Are you giving Roberta flack?
Reason just doesn’t care that much about the comments. It isn’t a priority.
A high level exec at Reason Foundation once told me they find the quality of the discussion in the comments embarrassing, and that’s why they hide them by default.
Maybe they should hide the articles by default.
If you don't like Reason, why are you here?
yes, it is embarrassing when your commenters routinely make higher quality arguments than your writers.
Ha ha. That is not the problem. Whatsoever.
Liver. Start working on pig liver transplants. I figure that's the organ I'm going to need soonest.
CB
So, what, 10 yrs. before Reason is projecting their panic about private restaurateurs being allowed to serve bacon to transspecies individuals on us?
Finally, some cannibalism I can get behind!
Whoops, not meant in reply.
Sad. They've defunded them so much that they're selling their own organs to get by.
The NYU surgeons attached the modified pig kidney to blood vessels in a deceased woman's upper leg (with the permission of her family). Her bodily functions were maintained with a ventilator.
Deceased but functioning? You'd think human reanimation would be the headline.
it's alive!
I hear it was a lot like the hamburger scene in Better Off Dead.
g*d bless claymation. and EVH
Human reanimation has been commonplace for decades. The body can be kept alive on support machinery long after the brain has dies, and it's done routinely to keep organs alive for transplant.
Now if they can perfect transplanting pig brains into humans, we could improve the performance of our politicians.
True -- but you're not supposed to say it out loud.
This has to be Islamophobic or anti-Semitic. Queue up the outrage mobs.
It might be better to try eliminating the immune response to alpha-gal so it doesn't produce IgM in transplants or IgE associated with alpha-gal syndrome, which basically makes people allergic to eating red meat after being bitten by some ticks such as the lone star tick.
https://phys.org/news/2013-07-chimp-pig-hybrid-humans.html
which basically makes people allergic to eating red meat after being bitten by some ticks such as the lone star tick
And Celiacs! And chronic Lyme disease! Sometimes even if they aren't bitten by a tick.
Exciting news, if it can be used successfully, it would be great. If the human heart has a disease, it will be able to obtain a good heart. I hope that with the passage of time orologi repliche, it can truly solve the problem of exclusivity and medical science progress.