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Review
. 2023 Apr 1;28(2):65-70.
doi: 10.1097/MOT.0000000000001055. Epub 2023 Feb 7.

The road to xenotransplantation

Affiliations
Review

The road to xenotransplantation

Daniel H Wolbrom et al. Curr Opin Organ Transplant. .

Abstract

Purpose of review: The aim of this study was to highlight recent progress in xenotransplantation and discuss the remaining obstacles/steps before the FDA is likely to approve a clinical trial.

Recent findings: Long-term survival of life-supporting xenografts in preclinical models has led to discussion of clinical trials of xenotransplantation. The reports of clinical cardiac xenotransplant based on compassionate use FDA approval and renal xenotransplants to brain-dead humans have led to further considerations of clinical trials. Discussions between the transplant community and the FDA have established critical next steps before a clinical trial of xenotransplants is likely to be approved. These steps include testing the clinical immunosuppression protocol and the organ from a genetically modified source animal in nonhuman primates with reproducible survival of at least 6 months. In addition, appropriate viral surveillance protocols and confirmation that the xenografts support appropriate human physiology are likely to be critical elements for FDA-approval. Finally, further studies in the human decedent model are likely to provide critical information about human immune and physiologic responses to xenografts.

Summary: This review highlights the current progress in nonhuman primate models and recent reports of human xenotransplantation. It also describes the remaining hurdles and currently understood FDA requirements that remain to be achieved before a clinical trial of xenotransplantation can be approved.

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References

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    2. Report of the first genetically-modified pig kidney transplant into brain dead humans. The kidneys worked for 54 hours without signs of hyperacute rejection despite not selecting recipients for low levels of xenoantibody or modifying the antibody levels in the recipeints before transplant.

    1. Porrett PM, Orandi BJ, Kumar V, Houp J, Anderson D, Cozette Killian A, Hauptfeld-Dolejsek V, Martin DE, Macedon S, Budd N, et al.: First clinical-grade porcine kidney xenotransplant using a human decedent model. Am J Transplant 2022, 22:1037–1053. - PubMed
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    2. Report of the first gentically-modified pig heart transplant into a living human. The recipeint survived for 2 months. There was detection of pCMV in the blood and the recipient had infectious complications related to his pre-transplant co-morbid conditions. Nevertheless, this is a milestone in the history of xenotransplantation.

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