Audrius Paskevicius’s research while affiliated with Skåne University Hospital and other places

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Publications (23)


Schematic drawing of the heart evaluation system.
Drawing of the resistance during a heartbeat.
The atrial vortex. The deairing catheter is perforated throughout the whole compliance chamber. To the right, cross-sections of the vortex chamber with the atrial connector attached are shown.
View of the heart evaluation system without sterility barrier.
Typical pressure graph from ex vivo evaluation. Donor’s body weight was 55 kg. Pressure and cardiac output settings were based on the in vivo response to 40 µg adrenaline. Coronary flow was 0.7 L/min. Cardiac output was 4.1 L/min for both left and right heart.

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Ex vivo evaluation of the whole heart function allowing selective investigation of the right and left heart
  • Article
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October 2024

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36 Reads

Stig Steen

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Audrius Paskevicius

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Erik Steen

Objectives. The aim was to demonstrate a reliable ex vivo method to test the function of the whole heart. Design. Pigs of varying sizes (44–80 kg) were exposed to dose response of adrenaline. Blood pressures and cardiac output were measured. The explanted hearts were tested in a novel ex vivo system to see if we could replicate the in vivo values at maximal adrenaline stimulation. The perfusion solution was STEEN Solution™ with erythrocytes and continuous infusion of essential drugs. In contrast to normal body circulation which is sequential, the heart evaluation system is divided into left and right heart circuits which are operating in parallel, making it possible to test the right and left heart individually or as a whole. The system provides coronary flow measurements. The nonlinear dynamic resistances are constructed to stabilize systolic and diastolic pressures in a broad range and independently from cardiac output. It is important for the functional evaluation to avoid pumping help for the heart; therefore, atrial vortexes are constructed to minimize pump flow directionality and energy from entering atria. Results. Ex vivo evaluation was able to match the maximal in vivo effect of adrenaline on cardiac output and blood pressures. After 2 h of evaluation, the blood gases and lactate were normal and free haemoglobin was zero. Autopsy of the hearts showed no macroscopic pathology. Conclusions. The system is able to give a reliable functional evaluation of the heart ex vivo.

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Combination of Anti-CD40 and Anti-CD40L Antibodies as Co-Stimulation Blockade in Preclinical Cardiac Xenotransplantation

August 2024

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109 Reads

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3 Citations

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Bruno Reichart

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The blockade of the CD40/CD40L immune checkpoint is considered essential for cardiac xenotransplantation. However, it is still unclear which single antibody directed against CD40 or CD40L (CD154), or which combination of antibodies, is better at preventing organ rejection. For example, the high doses of antibody administered in previous experiments might not be feasible for the treatment of humans, while thrombotic side effects were described for first-generation anti-CD40L antibodies. To address these issues, we conducted six orthotopic pig-to-baboon cardiac xenotransplantation experiments, combining a chimeric anti-CD40 antibody with an investigational long-acting PASylated anti-CD40L Fab fragment. The combination therapy effectively resulted in animal survival with a rate comparable to a previous study that utilized anti-CD40 monotherapy. Importantly, no incidence of thromboembolic events associated with the administration of the anti-CD40L PAS-Fab was observed. Two experiments failed early because of technical reasons, two were terminated deliberately after 90 days with the baboons in excellent condition and two were extended to 120 and 170 days, respectively. Unexpectedly, and despite the absence of any clinical signs, histopathology revealed fungal infections in all four recipients. This study provides, for the first time, insights into a combination therapy with anti-CD40/anti-CD40L antibodies to block this immune checkpoint.


Perioperative changes of hyaluronan (a,b), heparan sulfate (c,d) and syndecan-1 (e,f) in absolute values (ng/mL) and as fold increases compared to the preoperative values (left and right, respectively). (b,d,f) Mean values ± SD (n = 4). CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass; POD1, first postoperative day; XTx, xenotransplantation.
Perioperative courses of serum lactate in absolute values (ng/mL) and as fold increases compared to start of surgery (a,b). Correlation between perioperative lactate levels and changes of hyaluronan (c), heparan sulfate (d) and syndecan-1 (e). (b), mean values ± SD (n = 4). CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass; POD1, first postoperative day; XTx, xenotransplantation.
Postoperative courses of hyaluronan (a), heparan sulfate (b) and syndecan-1 (c) plasma concentrations. Group I, experiments deliberately terminated after 90 postoperative days with the baboons in excellent clinical condition, mean values ± SEM (n = 2); Group II, baboons with PCMV/PRV infections, mean values ± SEM (n = 2). PCMV/PRV, porcine cytomegalovirus/roseolovirus; POD, postoperative day.
Overview of the study group. F, female; M, male; PCMV/PRV, porcine cytomegalovirus/ porcine roseolovirus.
The Endothelial Glycocalyx in Pig-to-Baboon Cardiac Xenotransplantation—First Insights

June 2024

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69 Reads

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3 Citations

Cardiac xenotransplantation has seen remarkable success in recent years and is emerging as the most promising alternative to human cardiac allotransplantation. Despite these achievements, acute vascular rejection still presents a challenge for long-term xenograft acceptance and new insights into innate and adaptive immune responses as well as detailed characterizations of signaling pathways are necessary. In allotransplantation, endothelial cells and their sugar-rich surface—the endothelial glycocalyx—are known to influence organ rejection. In xenotransplantation, however, only in vitro data exist on the role of the endothelial glycocalyx so far. Thus, in the current study, we analyzed the changes of the endothelial glycocalyx components hyaluronan, heparan sulfate and syndecan-1 after pig-to-baboon cardiac xenotransplantations in the perioperative (n = 4) and postoperative (n = 5) periods. These analyses provide first insights into changes of the endothelial glycocalyx after pig-to-baboon cardiac xenotransplantation and show that damage to the endothelial glycocalyx seems to be comparable or even less pronounced than in similar human settings when current strategies of cardiac xenotransplantation are applied. At the same time, data from the experiments where current strategies, like non-ischemic preservation, growth inhibition or porcine cytomegalovirus (a porcine roseolovirus (PCMV/PRV)) elimination could not be applied indicate that damage of the endothelial glycocalyx also plays an important role in cardiac xenotransplantation.


Xenografts Show Signs of Concentric Hypertrophy and Dynamic Left Ventricular Outflow Tract Obstruction After Orthotopic Pig-to-baboon Heart Transplantation

August 2023

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46 Reads

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14 Citations

Transplantation

Background: Orthotopic cardiac xenotransplantation has seen substantial advancement in the last years and the initiation of a clinical pilot study is close. However, donor organ overgrowth has been a major hurdle for preclinical experiments, resulting in loss of function and the decease of the recipient. A better understanding of the pathogenesis of organ overgrowth after xenotransplantation is necessary before clinical application. Methods: Hearts from genetically modified (GGTA1-KO, hCD46/hTBM transgenic) juvenile pigs were orthotopically transplanted into male baboons. Group I (control, n = 3) received immunosuppression based on costimulation blockade, group II (growth inhibition, n = 9) was additionally treated with mechanistic target of rapamycin inhibitor, antihypertensive medication, and fast corticoid tapering. Thyroid hormones and insulin-like growth factor 1 were measured before transplantation and before euthanasia, left ventricular (LV) growth was assessed by echocardiography, and hemodynamic data were recorded via a wireless implant. Results: Insulin-like growth factor 1 was higher in baboons than in donor piglets but dropped to porcine levels at the end of the experiments in group I. LV mass increase was 10-fold faster in group I than in group II. This increase was caused by nonphysiological LV wall enlargement. Additionally, pressure gradients between LV and the ascending aorta developed, and signs of dynamic left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) obstruction appeared. Conclusions: After orthotopic xenotransplantation in baboon recipients, untreated porcine hearts showed rapidly progressing concentric hypertrophy with dynamic LVOT obstruction, mimicking hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy in humans. Antihypertensive and antiproliferative drugs reduced growth rate and inhibited LVOT obstruction, thereby preventing loss of function.


A novel nonlinear afterload for ex vivo heart evaluation: Porcine experimental results

May 2022

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32 Reads

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4 Citations

Artificial Organs

Background: Existing working heart models for ex vivo functional evaluation of donor hearts often use cardiac afterloads made up of discrete resistive and compliant elements. This approach limits the practicality of independently controlling systolic and diastolic aortic pressure to safely test the heart under multiple loading conditions. We present and investigate a novel afterload concept designed to enable such control. Methods: Six ∼70 kg pig hearts were evaluated in vivo, then ex vivo in left-ventricular working mode using the presented afterload. Both in vivo and ex vivo, the hearts were evaluated at two exertion levels: at rest and following a 20 ug adrenaline bolus, while measuring aortic pressure and flow, left ventricular pressure and volume, and left atrial pressure. Results: The afterload gave aortic pressure waveforms that matched the general shape of the in vivo measurements. A wide range of physiological systolic pressures (93 to 160 mmHg) and diastolic pressures (73 to 113 mmHg) were generated by the afterload. Conclusions: With the presented afterload concept, multiple physiological loading conditions could be tested ex vivo, and compared with the corresponding in vivo data. An additional control loop from the set pressure limits to the measured systolic and diastolic aortic pressure is proposed to address discrepancies observed between the set limits and the measured pressures.


Fig. 1. Circuit analogy of the parallel 4-element Windkessel model with driving current (flow) , corresponding voltage (pressure) , and parameters , , , .
Singular value decomposition = of the Hessian = 2 ( ).
Identification of cardiac afterload dynamics from data

April 2021

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78 Reads

The prospect of ex vivo functional evaluation of donor hearts is considered. Particularly, the dynamics of a synthetic cardiac afterload model are compared to those of normal physiology. A method for identification of continuous-time transfer functions from sampled data is developed and verified against results from the literature. The method relies on exact gradients and Hessians obtained through automatic differentiation. This also enables straightforward sensitivity analyses. Such analyses reveal that the 4-element Windkessel model is not practically identifiable from representative data while the 3-element model underfits the data. Pressure–volume (PV) loops are therefore suggested as an alternative for comparing afterload dynamics.


Identification of cardiac afterload dynamics from data

January 2021

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17 Reads

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4 Citations

IFAC-PapersOnLine

The prospect of ex vivo functional evaluation of donor hearts is considered. Particularly, the dynamics of a synthetic cardiac afterload model are compared to those of normal physiology. A method for identification of continuous-time transfer functions from sampled data is developed and verified against results from the literature. The method relies on exact gradients and Hessians obtained through automatic differentiation. This also enables straightforward sensitivity analyses. Such analyses reveal that the 4-element Windkessel model is not practically identifiable from representative data while the 3-element model underfits the data. Direct comparison of aortic pressure–flow relations, without relying on matching of fitted Windkessel model parameters, is therefore suggested as an alternative for comparing afterload dynamics.


Cold non‐ischemic heart preservation with continuous perfusion prevents early graft failure in orthotopic pig‐to‐baboon xenotransplantation

August 2020

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155 Reads

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51 Citations

Xenotransplantation

Background Successful preclinical transplantations of porcine hearts into baboon recipients are required before commencing clinical trials. Despite years of research, over half of the orthotopic cardiac xenografts were lost during the first 48 hours after transplantation, primarily caused by perioperative cardiac xenograft dysfunction (PCXD). To decrease the rate of PCXD, we adopted a preservation technique of cold non‐ischemic perfusion for our ongoing pig‐to‐baboon cardiac xenotransplantation project. Methods Fourteen orthotopic cardiac xenotransplantation experiments were carried out with genetically modified juvenile pigs (GGTA1‐ KO/hCD46/hTBM) as donors and captive‐bred baboons as recipients. Organ preservation was compared according to the two techniques applied: cold static ischemic cardioplegia (IC; n = 5) and cold non‐ischemic continuous perfusion (CP; n = 9) with an oxygenated albumin‐containing hyperoncotic cardioplegic solution containing nutrients, erythrocytes and hormones. Prior to surgery, we measured serum levels of preformed anti‐non‐Gal‐antibodies. During surgery, hemodynamic parameters were monitored with transpulmonary thermodilution. Central venous blood gas analyses were taken at regular intervals to estimate oxygen extraction, as well as lactate production. After surgery, we measured troponine T and serum parameters of the recipient’s kidney, liver and coagulation functions. Results In porcine grafts preserved with IC, we found significantly depressed systolic cardiac function after transplantation which did not recover despite increasing inotropic support. Postoperative oxygen extraction and lactate production were significantly increased. Troponin T, creatinine, aspartate aminotransferase levels were pathologically high, whereas prothrombin ratios were abnormally low. In three of five IC experiments, PCXD developed within 24 hours. By contrast, all nine hearts preserved with CP retained fully preserved systolic function, none showed any signs of PCXD. Oxygen extraction was within normal ranges; serum lactate as well as parameters of organ functions were only mildly elevated. Preformed anti‐non‐Gal‐antibodies were similar in recipients receiving grafts from either IC or CP preservation. Conclusions While standard ischemic cardioplegia solutions have been used with great success in human allotransplantation over many years, our data indicate that they are insufficient for preservation of porcine hearts transplanted into baboons: Ischemic storage caused severe impairment of cardiac function and decreased tissue oxygen supply, leading to multi‐organ failure in more than half of the xenotransplantation experiments. In contrast, cold non‐ischemic heart preservation with continuous perfusion reliably prevented early graft failure. Consistent survival in the perioperative phase is a prerequisite for preclinical long‐term results after cardiac xenotransplantation.


Fig. 2 CONSORT flow diagram. Modified CONSORT flow diagram for all recipients enrolled in the trial. MOF multi-organ failure; NIHP nonischemic heart preservation; SCS static cold storage.
Serious adverse events.
The nonischemic heart-preservation method (NIHP)
Shown is a drawing of the NIHP method (a). The equipment consists of a reservoir, a pressure-controlled roller pump, an oxygenator, an arterial-leukocyte filter, a heater–cooler unit, oxygen and carbon dioxide containers, a gas mixer, sensors, and a programmable control system. The reservoir is filled with 2.5 L of the perfusion solution (b) plus ~500 mL compatible irradiated and leukocyte-reduced blood cells from the hospital blood bank, providing a hematocrit of ~15%. Perfusion is provided through the aortic cannula to the coronary vessels. The picture (c) shows the first human heart transplantation using the NIHP method. The heart is mounted and submerged into the heart-preservation solution, which is actively regulated to maintain a pH of ~7.4 and a temperature of 8 °C. The device software is adjusted to maintain a mean blood pressure of 20 mmHg in the aortic root, providing a coronary flow between 150 and 250 mL/min.
The probability of event-free survival
The Kaplan–Meier plot shows the probability of event-free survival (primary end point) defined as survival free of severe primary graft dysfunction at 24 h, survival free of extracorporeal mechanical support use at 7 days, and survival free of acute cellular rejection ≥2R at 180 days (cyan: NIHP group; red: SCS group). Kaplan–Meier estimate free of event was 72% [95% CI 50–86%] for the SCS group. NIHP (n = 6) nonischemic heart preservation; SCS (n = 25) static cold storage.
Creatine kinase-muscle/brain level after preservation according to the treatment group
The box plot shows the creatine kinase-muscle/brain (CK-MB) level at different timepoints after ending preservation (T0). Data are represented as boxplots. The middle line is the median, the lower and upper axis correspond to the first and third quartiles, the upper whisker extends from the axis to the largest value no further than 1.5 × interquartile range (IQR) from the axis, and the lower whisker extends from the axis to the smallest value (at most 1.5 × IQR) of the axis. Data beyond the end of the whiskers are outlying points that are plotted individually. NIHP (n = 6) nonischemic heart preservation; SCS (n = 25) static cold storage.
A nonrandomized open-label phase 2 trial of nonischemic heart preservation for human heart transplantation

June 2020

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387 Reads

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96 Citations

Pre-clinical heart transplantation studies have shown that ex vivo non-ischemic heart preservation (NIHP) can be safely used for 24 h. Here we perform a prospective, open-label, non-randomized phase II study comparing NIHP to static cold preservation (SCS), the current standard for adult heart transplantation. All adult recipients on waiting lists for heart transplantation were included in the study, unless they met any exclusion criteria. The same standard acceptance criteria for donor hearts were used in both study arms. NIHP was scheduled in advance based on availability of device and trained team members. The primary endpoint was a composite of survival free of severe primary graft dysfunction, free of ECMO use within 7 days, and free of acute cellular rejection ≥2R within 180 days. Secondary endpoints were I/R-tissue injury, immediate graft function, and adverse events. Of the 31 eligible patients, six were assigned to NIHP and 25 to SCS. The median preservation time was 223 min (IQR, 202–263) for NIHP and 194 min (IQR, 164–223) for SCS. Over the first six months, all of the patients assigned to NIHP achieved event-free survival, compared with 18 of those assigned to SCS (Kaplan-Meier estimate of event free survival 72.0% [95% CI 50.0–86.0%]). CK-MB assessed 6 ± 2 h after ending perfusion was 76 (IQR, 50–101) ng/mL for NIHP compared with 138 (IQR, 72–198) ng/mL for SCS. Four deaths within six months after transplantation and three cardiac-related adverse events were reported in the SCS group compared with no deaths or cardiac-related adverse events in the NIHP group. This first-in-human study shows the feasibility and safety of NIHP for clinical use in heart transplantation. ClinicalTrial.gov, number NCT03150147


Figure 3: Troponin T serum levels levels increased in the immediate post-operative course
Figure 6: Cross-sections of the two additional genetically modified porcine hearts that survived for at least 90 days (ID 17482 and ID 16701). For comparison, cross-sections of earlier experiments from that series are shown 3 : ID 17290 and ID 17186 were euthanized in
Figure 7: Microscopic evaluation revealed mild to marked perivascular (arrow) and interstitial
Pig-to-non-human primate heart transplantation: The final step toward clinical xenotransplantation?

May 2020

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460 Reads

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73 Citations

The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation

Background The demand for donated human hearts far exceeds the number available. Xenotransplantation of genetically modified porcine organs provides an alternative. In 2000, an Advisory Board of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT) set the benchmark for commencing clinical cardiac xenotransplantation as consistent 60% survival of non-human primates after life-supporting porcine heart transplantations. Recently, we reported the stepwise optimization of pig-to-baboon orthotopic cardiac xenotransplantation, finally resulting in consistent success with four recipients surviving 90 (n = 2), 182 and 195 days. Here we report on four additional recipients, supporting the efficacy of our procedure. Results The first two additional recipients succumbed to porcine CMV (PCMV) infections on days 15 and 27, respectively. In two further experiments, PCMV infections were successfully avoided, and three months survival was achieved. Throughout all long-term experiments, heart, liver and renal functions remained within normal ranges. Post-mortem cardiac diameters were slightly increased when compared to the time of transplantation, but with no detrimental effect. There were no signs of thrombotic microangiopathy. The current regimen enabled the prolonged survival and function of orthotopic cardiac xenografts in altogether six out of eight baboons, of which four were now added. These results exceed the threshold set by the ISHLT Advisory Board. Conclusions The results of our current and prior experimental cardiac xenotransplantations together fulfill for the first time the preclinical efficacy suggestions. PCMV-positive donor animals must be avoided.


Citations (21)


... Although this approach initially proves effective, CD8 + T cells proliferate rapidly following T cell depletion therapies, with the majority comprising effector-memory T cells [128]. This was recently confirmed in a pig-to-baboon genetically modified porcine kidney and heart transplantation models [10,[129][130][131]. ...

Reference:

Cytotoxic Responses Mediated by NK Cells and Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes in Xenotransplantation
Combination of Anti-CD40 and Anti-CD40L Antibodies as Co-Stimulation Blockade in Preclinical Cardiac Xenotransplantation

... Studies in pig-to-baboon cardiac xenotransplantation show that changes in glycocalyx components, including hyaluronan and syndecan-1, are similar to or less pronounced than in human settings. These findings suggest that preserving the glycocalyx could improve xenograft survival and may offer a novel therapeutic avenue for enhancing graft survival [2]. ...

The Endothelial Glycocalyx in Pig-to-Baboon Cardiac Xenotransplantation—First Insights

... Besides genetic determination [69] (an intrinsic or donor-specific factor), several extrinsic (recipient-specific) factors have been described to influence cardiac growth after xHTX: nutrition [69], levels of growth hormone (GH), insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1) [70], hormones (thyroid hormones, vascular endothelial growth factor, insulin, catecholamines, endothelin, angiotensin), and mechanical stress/strain [71]. Interestingly, extensive cardiac overgrowth did not occur in the heterotopic abdominal pig-to-baboon xHTx model despite intrinsic mismatch of growth rate and organ size [11]: this is possibly due to the lack of relevant afterload in this non-working model (reviewed in [72]), leading to myocardial atrophy [73] and thereby counteracting the intrinsic growth of the graft [74]. By contrast, in the orthotopic model, the juvenile pig heart needs to adapt to an unphysiologically elevated afterload in an adult baboon [75]; elevated afterload is known to trigger myocardial hypertrophy [76,77]. ...

Xenografts Show Signs of Concentric Hypertrophy and Dynamic Left Ventricular Outflow Tract Obstruction After Orthotopic Pig-to-baboon Heart Transplantation
  • Citing Article
  • August 2023

Transplantation

... Our group has investigated an alternative afterload approach using an adjustable pneumatic system based on Starling's original design wherein the pressure surrounding a flexible tube through which the perfusate flows is modulated to control afterload [35]. The afterload demonstrated physiological loading conditions in multiple porcine working heart experiments. ...

A novel nonlinear afterload for ex vivo heart evaluation: Porcine experimental results

Artificial Organs

... An advantage of these Windkessel afterloads is that, with correctly adjusted elements, they can produce near-physiological pressure waveforms in the large arteries [19]. However, identifying valid parameter values and adjusting the elements accordingly is nontrivial [26]. Since the mid 1980s, the ability of these models to adjust aortic pressure in working heart models has been explored. ...

Identification of cardiac afterload dynamics from data
  • Citing Article
  • January 2021

IFAC-PapersOnLine

... After promising preclinical studies [15,16], in 2022, a pig donor heart, preserved with NIHP, was transplanted into a human recipient [17]. To match a pig donor heart with a specific human recipient, there will be a need for a functional evaluation. ...

Cold non‐ischemic heart preservation with continuous perfusion prevents early graft failure in orthotopic pig‐to‐baboon xenotransplantation

Xenotransplantation

... The XHPS reservoir contains 2.5 L of perfusion solution and~500 mL of donor/recipient-compatible irradiated and leukocyte-reduced blood (from a hospital blood bank) to obtain a hematocrit of~15% and a pH of 7.4. Antegrade perfusion through the aortic root is controlled to 20 mmHg, ranging between 150 and 250 mL/min [61]. ...

A nonrandomized open-label phase 2 trial of nonischemic heart preservation for human heart transplantation

... In contrast to life-supporting xenogeneic heart transplantation experiments in baboons [20,69] and the first compassionate use transplantations in live patients [23], perfusion preservation of the porcine hearts was not performed in these studies in decedents [67]. Furthermore, standard immunosuppression plus the complement inhibitor eculizumab, but not CD40-CD154 co-stimulation blockade was used. ...

Pig-to-non-human primate heart transplantation: The final step toward clinical xenotransplantation?

The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation

... One additional study was identified from the screening of reference lists in the included publications. Ultimately, 40 studies were included in this review: 18 papers (6,7,(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19)(20)(21)(22)(23)(24), 17 conference abstracts (5,(25)(26)(27)(28)(29)(30)(31)(32)(33)(34)(35)(36)(37)(38)(39)(40), and five ongoing clinical trials (41)(42)(43)(44)(45). Three studies reported multicenter data (7,25,40), and three were randomized controlled studies (7,12,13). ...

Non-Ischemic Heart Preservation versus Static Cold Storage in Human Heart Transplantation
  • Citing Article
  • April 2020

The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation

... For instance, xenotransplantation from a pig heart to a non-human heart was investigated, and the results showed that cardiac xenotransplantation was feasible in the midterm. 2 A landmark in this field was the publication of a study in 2018 in which modified pig hearts were transplanted in chimpanzees, and the survival exceeded 195 days in 4 out of 5 recipients. 3 The results of that study raised the interest in heart xenotransplantation among scientists. Pierson 4 claimed that such results, on condition of reproducibility, could pave the way toward further clinical heart xenotransplantation trials. ...

Author Correction: Consistent success in life-supporting porcine cardiac xenotransplantation

Nature