PARIS: Surgeons said on Thursday they had
transplanted the first-ever vein grown in a lab from a patient's own stem cells
into a 10-year-old girl, sparing her the trauma of harvesting veins from her
body.
The
ground-breaking procedure may offer hope for patients who don't have healthy
veins for use in dialysis or heart bypass surgery, said a paper published in
the Lancet medical journal.
Synthetic
veins are prone to clots and blockages, and recipients of foreign veins need to
take immunosuppressive drugs for the rest of their lives to prevent rejection.
In this
instance, a team of doctors from the University of Gothenburg in Sweden took a
nine-centimetre segment of vein from the groin of a dead human donor and
removed all living cells.
They
then injected the tissue with stem cells obtained from the bone marrow of the
girl, diagnosed with a potentially lethal blockage of the portal vein - a large
vessel that carries blood to the liver for detoxification.
Two
weeks after this "seeding", the vein was implanted into the patient
using a bypass technique, the doctors wrote.
"The
young girl in this report was spared the trauma of having veins harvested from
the deep neck or leg with the associated risk of lower limb disorders,"
researchers Martin Birchall and George Hamilton wrote in a comment published
with the paper.
Surgery
to restore portal blood flow using donor or artificial veins have had mixed
success to date.
The
research team said the patient had no complications from the operation and
normal blood flow was restored immediately.
And
because the vein holds her own cells, she does not require immunosuppressive
drugs.
The
girl had to have an additional graft a year after the first, but has remained
in good health, is able to take increasingly long walks up to three kilometres,
and takes part in light gymnastics, noted the report.
The new
graft method resulted in "strikingly improved quality of life for the
patient," the authors said in a statement.
Birchall
and Hamilton noted that high cost and the long time required to prepare this
type of graft meant it was unlikely to take off as a common treatment right
away.
While
the procedure was promising, they added, one-off tests like this one must be
converted into full clinical trials.
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AFP/de
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