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World Premiere: Successful Transplant of Human Liver Treated in Machine

The multidisciplinary Zurich research team Liver4Life has succeeded in doing something during a treatment attempt that had never been achieved in the history of medicine until now: it treated an originally damaged human liver in a machine for three days outside of a body and then implanted the recovered organ into a cancer patient. One year later, the patient is doing well.
The Wyss Zurich Team connects the donor liver to the perfusion machine in the clean room.

The Liver4Life research team owes its perfusion machine, which was developed in house, to the fact that it became possible to implant a human organ into a patient after a storage period of three days outside a body. The machine mimics the human body as accurately as possible, in order to provide ideal conditions for the human livers. A pump serves as a replacement heart, an oxygenator replaces the lungs and a dialysis unit performs the functions of the kidneys. In addition, numerous hormone and nutrient infusions perform the functions of the intestine and pancreas. Like the diaphragm in the human body, the machine also moves the liver to the rhythm of human breathing. In January 2020, the multidisciplinary Zurich research team – involving the collaboration of University Hospital Zurich (USZ), ETH Zurich and the University of Zurich (UZH) – demonstrated for the first time that perfusion technology makes it possible to store a liver outside the body for several days. Press release 13.1.20

From poor to good in three days

The team prepared the liver in the machine with various drugs. In this way, it was possible to transform the liver into a good human organ, even though it was originally not approved for transplantation due to its poor quality. The multi-day perfusion, i.e. the mechanical circulation of the organ, enables antibiotic or hormonal therapies or the optimization of liver metabolism, for example. In addition, lengthy laboratory or tissue tests can be carried out without time pressure. Under normal circumstances, this is not possible because organs can only be stored for 12 hours if they are stored conventionally on ice and in commercially available perfusion machines.

Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien and Prof. Philipp Dutkowski during the transplantation of the liver treated in the machine. (Image: USZ)

Treatment attempt successful

As part of an approved individual treatment attempt, the doctors gave a cancer patient on the Swisstransplant waiting list the choice of using the treated human liver. Following his consent, the organ was transplanted in May 2021. The patient was able to leave hospital a few days after the transplantation and is now doing well: “I am very grateful for the life-saving organ. Due to my rapidly progressing tumor, I had little chance of getting a liver from the waiting list within a reasonable period of time.”

Saving more lives

The article on the first transplantation of a liver prepared in a perfusion machine was published in one of the most renowned scientific journals, Nature Biotechnology, on 31 May 2022. “Our therapy shows that by treating livers in the perfusion machine, it is possible to alleviate the lack of functioning human organs and save lives,” explains Pierre-Alain Clavien, director of the Department of Visceral Surgery and Transplantation at the University Hospital Zurich (USZ). Mark Tibbitt, professor of macromolecular engineering at ETH Zurich, adds: “The interdisciplinary approach to solving complex biomedical challenges embodied in this project is the future of medicine. This will allow us to use new findings even more quickly for treating patients.”

The next step in the Liver4Life project is to review the procedure on other patients and to demonstrate its efficacy and safety in the form of a multicenter study. Its success would mean that in the future, a liver transplantation, which usually constitutes an emergency procedure, would be transformed into a plannable elective procedure. At the same time, a next generation of machines is being developed. In addition, those involved in basic research continue to look for ways of treating other liver diseases outside the body with drugs, molecules or hormones.

Literature:

Clavien PA, Dutkowski P et al. Transplantation of a human liver following 3 days of ex situ normothermic preservation. Nature Biotechnology. Mai 31, 2022. DOI: 10.1038/s41587-022-01354-7

The surgeon, Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien, and the patient when the latter was discharged from hospital after the successful transplantation. (Picture: USZ)

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  • The Wyss Zurich Team connects the donor liver to the perfusion machine in the clean room.

    (JPG, 420 KB)

    The Wyss Zurich Team connects the donor liver to the perfusion machine in the clean room. (Image: USZ)

  • Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien and Prof. Philipp Dutkowski during the transplantation of the liver treated in the machine.

    (JPG, 8.15 MB)

    Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien and Prof. Philipp Dutkowski during the transplantation of the liver treated in the machine. (Image: USZ)

  • The surgeon, Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien, and the patient when the latter was discharged from hospital after the successful transplantation.

    (JPG, 5.83 MB)

    The surgeon, Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien, and the patient when the latter was discharged from hospital after the successful transplantation. (Image: USZ)

  • The perfusion machine replaces the functions of various organs in order to keep the donor liver alive outside of the body.

    (PNG, 506 KB)

    The perfusion machine replaces the functions of various organs in order to keep the donor liver alive outside of the body. (Image: USZ)

  • Anniversary celebration of the Wyss Zurich Team with the patient. From left to right: Matteo Müller, Prof. Mark Tibbitt, the patient, Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien, Lucia Bautista Borrego, Max Hefti and Richard Sousa Da Silva.

    (JPG, 3.00 MB)

    Anniversary celebration of the Wyss Zurich Team with the patient. From left to right: Matteo Müller, Prof. Mark Tibbitt, the patient, Prof. Pierre-Alain Clavien, Lucia Bautista Borrego, Max Hefti and Richard Sousa Da Silva. (Image: USZ)