Pig-to-human heart transplantation: Who goes first?
- PMID: 32301262
- PMCID: PMC9448330
- DOI: 10.1111/ajt.15916
Pig-to-human heart transplantation: Who goes first?
Abstract
Cardiac xenotransplantation has recently taken an important step towards clinical reality. In anticipation of the "first-in-human" heart xenotransplantation trial, we propose a set of patient characteristics that define potential candidates. Our premise is that, to be ethically justified, the risks posed by current state-of-the-art options must outweigh the anticipated risks of a pioneering xenotransplant procedure. Suitable candidates include patients who are at high immunologic risk because of sensitization to alloantigens, including those who have exhibited early onset or accelerated cardiac allograft vasculopathy. In addition, patients should be considered (1) for whom mechanical circulatory support would be prohibitively risky due to a hypercoagulable state, a contraindication to anticoagulation, or restrictive physiology; (2) with severe biventricular dysfunction predicting unsuccessful univentricular left heart support; and (3) adults with complex congenital heart disease. In conclusion, because the published preclinical benchmark for clinical translation of heart xenotransplantation appears within reach, carefully and deliberately defining appropriate trial participants is timely as the basis for ethical clinical trial design.
Keywords: alloantibody/allosensitization/alloimmunity; cardiac allograft vasculopathy; cardiac/heart transplant; cardiac/heart transplant: alternatives; chronic rejection; ethics and public policy; heart failure; mechanical circulatory support; mechanical circulatory support: alternatives; translational research/science; xenotransplantation.
© 2020 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.
Conflict of interest statement
DISCLOSURE
The authors of this manuscript have no conflicts of interest to disclose as described by the
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