Surgeons in Sweden have carried
out the world's first synthetic organ transplant.
Scientists in London created an
artificial windpipe which was then coated in stem cells from the patient.
Crucially, the technique does not
need a donor, and there is no risk of the organ being rejected. The surgeons
stress a windpipe can also be made within days.
The 36-year-old cancer patient is
doing well a month after the operation.
Professor Paolo Macchiarini from
Spain led the pioneering surgery, which took place at the Karolinska University
Hospital.
In an interview with the BBC, he
said he now hopes to use the technique to treat a nine-month-old child in Korea
who was born with a malformed windpipe or trachea.
Professor Macchiarini already has
10 other windpipe transplants under his belt - most notably the world's first
tissue-engineered tracheal transplant in 2008 on 30-year-old Spanish woman
Claudia Costillo - but all required a donor.
Indistinguishable
The key to the latest technique
is modelling a structure or scaffold that is an exact replica of the patient's
own windpipe, removing the need for a donor organ.
To do this he enlisted the help
of UK experts were given 3D scans of the 36-year-old African patient,
Andemariam Teklesenbet Beyene. The geology student currently lives in Iceland
where he is studying for a PhD.
Using these images, the
scientists at University College London were able to craft a perfect copy of Mr
Beyene's trachea and two main bronchi out of glass.
They then coated this was then
flown to Sweden and soaked in a solution of stem cells taken from the patient's
bone marrow.
After two days, the millions of
holes in the porous windpipe had been seeded with the patient' own tissue.
Dr Alex Seifalian and his team
used this fragile structure to create a replacement for the patient, whose own
windpipe was ravaged by an inoperable tumour.
Despite aggressive chemotherapy
and radiotherapy, the cancer had grown to the size of a golf ball and was
blocking his breathing. Without a transplant he would have died.
During a 12-hour operation
Professor Macchiarini removed all of the tumour and the diseased windpipe and
replaced it with the tailor-made replica.
The bone marrow cells and lining
cells taken from his nose, which were also implanted during the operation, are
able to divide and grow, turning the inert windpipe scaffold into an organ
indistinguishable from a normal healthy one.
And, importantly, Mr Beyene's
body will accept it as its own, meaning he will not need to take the strong
anti-rejection drugs that other transplant patients have to.
Professor Macchiarini said this
was the real breakthrough.
"Thanks to nanotechnology,
this new branch of regenerative medicine, we are now able to produce a
custom-made windpipe within two days or one week.
"This is a synthetic
windpipe. The beauty of this is you can have it immediately. There is no delay.
This technique does not rely on a human donation."
He said many other organs could
be repaired or replaced in the same way.
A month on from his operation, Mr
Beyene is still looking weak, but well.
Sitting up in his hospital bed,
he said: "I was very scared, very scared about the operation. But it was
live or die."
He says he is looking forward to
getting back to Iceland to finish his studies and then returning to his home in
Eritrea where he will be reunited with his wife and young family, and meet his
new three-month-old child.
He says he is eternally grateful
to the medical team that has saved his life.
Source: BBC News
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