US school begins nation's 1st HIV-positive organ transplants
It's a long-awaited new option for patients with the AIDS virus whose kidneys or livers also are failing.
Washington: Surgeons in the US for the first time have transplanted organs between an HIV-positive donor and HIV-positive recipients. It's a long-awaited new option for patients with the AIDS virus whose kidneys or livers also
are failing.
Johns Hopkins University announced today that both recipients are recovering well after one received a kidney and the other a liver from a deceased donor organs that ordinarily would have been thrown away because of the HIV infection.
Doctors in South Africa have reported successfully transplanting HIV-positive kidneys, but Hopkins said the HIV-positive liver transplant is the first worldwide.
"This could mean a new chance at life," said Dr Dorry Segev, a Hopkins transplant specialist who pushed for legislation lifting a 25-year US ban on the approach and estimates that hundreds of HIV-positive patients may benefit.
For patients who don't have the AIDS virus, nothing changes they wouldn't be offered HIV-positive organs. The surgeries, performed earlier this month, are part of research to determine if HIV-positive transplants really can help HIV-positive recipients.
The reason: Modern anti-AIDS medications have turned HIV from a quick killer into a chronic disease, meaning patients may live long enough to suffer organ failure, either because of their HIV or for some other reason.
In the US, HIV-positive patients already are eligible to receive transplants from HIV-negative donors just like anyone else on the waiting list. That list is long for kidneys, more than 100,000 people are in line and thousands die waiting each year.
There's no count of how many of those waiting have HIV, but Segev said it
increases the risk of death while waiting. If the new approach works, one hope is that it could free up space on the waiting list as HIV-positive patients take
advantage of organs available only to them.
Segev estimated that 300 to 500 would-be donors who are HIV-positive die each year, potentially enough kidneys and livers for 1,000 additional transplants.
"It increases the pool of potential organ donors and allows more people to be transplanted. That's the advantage of this whole thing, but it is a research project so we are going to monitor it very carefully," said Dr David Klassen of the United Network for Organ Sharing, which oversees the nation's transplant system.