University of Manchester scientists have discovered that removing immune cells from donor hearts using a new technique can reduce the risk of acute rejection after heart transplant surgery – even without the use of powerful immunosuppressant drugs.
The method- called ex-vivo heart perfusion – protects and restores the heart once it has been removed from the donor, and extends the current preservation time for the organs from 4 to 24 hours.
EVHP was developed by a team led by Professor Stig Steen from Lund University in Sweden.
The new Manchester and Lund study โ published in the journal Frontiers of Immunology sheds light on how acute rejection is triggered.
Immune cells in the donor heart, they show, migrate into the transplant recipientโs body and are recognised as foreign. The recipientโs immune system is then programmed to destroy the transplanted organ.
Dr James Fildes from The University of Manchester lead the team that analysed donor hearts from pigs before and after EVHP, and reported that the resident immune cells were significantly depleted.
He is also a Principal Scientist at Wythenshawe Hospital โ part of Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust (MFT)
"The technique developed by Prof Steen is a major advance in heart transplantation, as organs can be stored for longer, with incredible preservation."
Dr James Fildes
They also found the molecular health of the tissue was excellent, resulting in less inflammation.
The hearts were analysed, preserved and transplanted in pigs using the new technique, and compared with the current method, which involves storing the heart in ice before transplantation.
After, EVHP there was little evidence of rejection, even in the absence of immunosuppression, whereas the non EVHP hearts showed signs of severe rejection very quickly.
Currently when patients receive a transplant, they need lifelong immunosuppression to prevent their own immune system from destroying the transplanted organ, a process called acute rejection.
Dr Fildes, runs the Ex-Vivo Lab at the University of Manchester and the Transplant Research Labย at Manchester Foundation NHS Trust
He said: โHistorically, the most common and rapid complication following heart transplantation has been acute rejection.
โWith the advent of modern immunosuppression, it is now rare for a transplant recipient to die of acute rejection, but these medicines are inherently toxic, and leave the patient susceptible to infections, cancer, and kidney disease.โ
He added: โThe technique developed by Prof Steen is a major advance in heart transplantation, as organs can be stored for longer, with incredible preservation.
โWhat we show in this study is that the technique modifies the heart by removing donor immune cells which we know drive acute rejection. It also improves the state of the tissue, which reduces inflammation.
โSo this technique has the potential to be a game changer in heart transplant surgery.โ
This work comes as the availability of transplant organs in the UK has plummeted during lockdown, leaving many patients waiting for surgery. The drop exacerbates an already acute shortage of donor hearts.
The technique is now being evaluated in humans in a clinical trial across Sweden.
The paper, Hypothermic cardioplegic perfusion induces immunodepletion of donor hearts resulting in diminished graft infiltration following transplantation, is published in Frontiers of Immunology
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