Saturday, 25 October 2014

"Dead Heart" Transplant - World First in Cardiac Surgery

In Australia this month, surgeons have managed to resuscitate a heart from circulatory death and use it for transplant in patients with 'end-stage heart failure'. Prior to this, hearts used for transplant were only sourced from brain-dead patients but whose hearts were still beating. Some have heralded this as a 'paradigm shift' in organ transplantation. The heart was able to be revived using what has been  dubbed as the 'heart-in-a-box' machine (the OCS - Organ Care System). Now the machine is commercially available to hospitals in Europe and Australia for clinical use. Usually, a beating heart is kept iced for a long period of time, however this machine is claimed to be a 'portable, warm perfusion, monitoring machine'. As of now, St. Vincent's Hospital Heart Lung Transplant Unit in Australia has transplanted two patients using this technique. However it is important to note that the OCS has already been used and approved for other types of transplantation such as the liver, kidneys and lungs. Up until now, it has proved difficult to repeat the same technique on 'dead' hearts.

The benefits of this new technique prove essential - the maximum possible number of donor hearts available will inevitably increase. In fact, it is estimated that 30% more lives could be saved with the introduction of this technique. Professor Peter MacDonald, Medical Director of the St Vincent's Heart Transplant Unit has said "this is a timely breakthrough. In all our years, our biggest hinderance has been the limited availability of donor organs". With regards to the OCS machine, portability is useful if it is needed in various departments in a hospital. It would also mean ease of transportation nationwide, or even worldwide.

 

Top: OCS "Heart-in-a-box" machine (TransMedics)
Above: OCS machine maintaining liver for transplant (BBC)


Interestingly however, this isn't the first time that this idea of using a dead heart donor has been experimented. Professor Kumud Dhital perfumed both of the operations in Austrailia says that "It is interesting to note that DCD hearts were utilised for the first wave of human heart transplants in the 1960's with the donor and recipient in adjacent operating theatres. This co-location of donor and recipient is extremely rare in the current era leading us to rely solely on brain dead donors -- until now".

The recovery of patients is even more astounding. Michelle Gribilas, 57, was the first patient to be treated with the surgery. Before the operation she was suffering from congenital [end-stage] heart failure. Two months after the procedure, she told the BBC: "Now I'm a different person altogether. I feel like I'm 40 years old - I'm very lucky". Senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, Maureen Talbot, added "without this development, [patients] may still be waiting for a donor heart".


Credit to the BBC for their article 'Surgeons transplant heart that had stopped beating', published 24th October 2014. More on the subject can be found here.

Credit to St Vincent's Health Australia, whose story was published in ScienceDaily on October 24th 2014. The original article can be found here.

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