Thursday, 2 August 2018

Quartz.com/Katherine Ellen Foley: After 15 years of trying, scientists successfully transplanted lab-grown lungs into pigs

Reuters/Thomas Peter
A success in swine is a step closer to success in humans.
BREATH BEFORE SWINE
After 15 years of trying, scientists successfully transplanted lab-grown lungs into pigs
By Katherine Ellen Foley August 1, 2018

Every year, lung transplants help thousands of patients stay alive, but the system is far from perfect. The average wait time for a new lung is three to six months and can sometimes be years.

Further, when a new transplant does become available, it may not be an ideal fit for a patient’s body. Typically, a surgeon must manually adjust the size of the lung to match the patient—an opportunity for complications to arise. And even after a successful transplant surgery, patients have to take immunosuppressant drugs their entire lives to ensure their bodies don’t reject the new lung.

To overcome these challenges, internist Joan Nichols and her colleagues at the University of Texas Medical Branch have spent years finding ways to engineer a lung from scratch in the laboratory, using donated cells. Theoretically, these lungs could be custom-built for each patient, solving both wait-time and compatibility problems. In early trials, though, these lungs have failed to keep donee animals alive for more than a few hours; the engineered organs couldn’t replicate the complexity of the blood vessels that enable the transfer oxygen to the blood stream. Until now.

On Wednesday, Aug. 1, Nichols and her team published (paywall) work in Science Tr m anslational Medicine showing that lungs created from pigs could be successfully transplanted into the animals for long periods of time. And it appeared that the engineered lungs were successfully providing oxygen to their blood, and were correctly growing the network of tiny blood vessels in the organ tissue.

The team reports first surgically removing one lung from four pigs, animals with relatively similar organ compositions as humans. After a month, the four pigs received a bioengineered second lung created from pig cells and extra protein scaffolding as a way of coaxing the cells to grow in the proper shape. Because this was a novel study, the team was focused on the early stages of the organ’s development after the transplant. Each pig was euthanized at various points in time following the transplant so that researchers could see how the lab-built lung developed. Throughout, the tissue appeared to adapt to its new environment, and did not show signs of any of the normal complications of growing into a new body, like forming blood clots. All the pigs had normal oxygen levels throughout the duration of the experiment. The team euthanized the last pig two months after the transplant.

The next steps will be trying again, this time keeping the pigs alive for longer, to see how bioengineered lungs hold up over time. If so, it would add evidence to the argument that a similar engineering technique could be feasible for human recipients in the (relatively) near future.
science, health, organ donation, bioengineering, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
Read This Next
A participant poses with a replica of the planet during the World Climate Change Conference 2015 (COP21) at Le Bourget, near Paris, France, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe - LR1EBC80WWOQM
Humans have depleted the Earth’s natural resources with five months still to go in 2018
August 1, 2018Quartz
Most Popular
The computer beckons
YOU'RE WORTH RECHARGING
Minecraft’s head says American employees should get a gap year like they do in Sweden
22 minutes agoQuartz at Work
Zimbabwe election: Military intervention, protests leave three dead
The show of force by Zimbabwe’s military this election is about their own power, not politics
23 minutes agoQuartz Africa
KILL ME
They’re doing it. They’re really rebooting “ALF”
29 minutes agoQuartzy
I'M SPEAKING
How to be assertive—even when you’re constantly talked over
1 hour agoQuartz at Work
TRUST ISSUES
Elizabeth Holmes and other famous grifters expose the myth of quick and easy success
1 hour agoQuartz
HOW NOW SKINNY BROW?
Rihanna’s Vogue cover recalls a long, miserable history of over-plucked brows
2 hours agoQuartzy
KING JAMES
LeBron James’ new school for at-risk kids features food pantries and free bikes
2 hours agoQuartz
GOING FOR IT
The only reason to buy the newest Surface is the price
2 hours agoQuartz
LIGHTS ON
African governments’ quest for cheap electricity has kept millions of us in the dark
3 hours agoQuartz Africa
COPYCAT
Like the US, the UK is hiking interest rates—but for flimsier reasons
4 hours agoQuartz
FEELING THE HEAT
Rising global temperatures will cool Africa’s economic growth than anywhere else
4 hours agoQuartz Africa
BABY STEPS
Nigeria has taken its first steps in adopting China’s yuan as a reserve currency
4 hours agoQuartz Africa
CH-CH-CHANGES
Decided to become vegan? Make sure you transition correctly
4 hours agoQuartzy
Latest
Featured
Obsessions
Emails
Editions

No comments: