| Mismatched hearts save babies' lives
Lack of immune rejection fuels wrong-blood-type transplants
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 WASHINGTON - Connor Geddes was 13 days old when surgeons gave him a new heart that didn't match his blood type - deliberately. Connor, now 11 months old and thriving, is one of several dozen babies around the world to have received mismatched hearts, part of a slowly growing movement to increase these tiniest patients' survival by taking advantage of a lag in their immune systems. Now the nation's transplant network is expanding that effort, saying youngsters may be candidates for an incompatible heart up to age 2. It's the first step in a new push by the United Network for Organ Sharing to decrease the number of children who die awaiting an organ transplant, a toll particularly high for infants and toddlers. 'It will not happen overnight' "It will not happen overnight," cautioned Dr. Stuart Sweet of Washington University in St. Louis, chairman of the network's pediatric transplant committee. But the new heart guidelines "have the potential for significantly impacting the number of patients who die on the waiting list." If the policy sounds counterintuitive, well, it is: Implant a mismatched heart in an adult, and he or she will die rapidly. That happened in 2003, when surgeons in North Carolina accidentally gave a teenager the wrong-type heart and lungs. But babies' immune systems must learn to recognize and attack an organ of a different blood type, a process that's turning out to be more gradual than scientists long thought. Transplant a heart before the baby starts making antibodies that will attack a mismatched organ, and he or she survives as well as babies given matching hearts, says Dr. Lori West, the Canadian surgeon who pioneered incompatible transplants in Toronto in the late 1990s. Those babies still need immune-suppressing drugs for life - blood type is just one form of organ rejection. | CLICK FOR RELATED CONTENT |
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