I heard this this morning on NPR, All Things Considered Then looked it up at the John Hopkins web page and a few others.
Johns Hopkins experts have successfully completed the first 16-patient, multicenter "domino donor" kidney transplant.
Surgical teams at The Johns Hopkins Hospital carried out the eight-way, multihospital, domino kidney transplant in collaboration with colleagues at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis, INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma City and Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.
The 16 surgeries were performed on four different dates, June 15, June 16, June 22 and July 6.
They involved eight donors - 3 men and 5 women along with eight organ recipients - 3 men and 5 women.
"All Johns Hopkins patients are in good condition and are recovering as anticipated," according to Dr. Robert A. Montgomery, the director of the Johns Hopkins Comprehensive Transplant Center.
The procedure, kidney paired donation (KPD), takes a group of incompatible donor-recipient pairs, and matches them with other pairs in a similar predicament.
By exchanging kidneys between the pairs, it is possible to give each recipient a compatible kidney.
This way, each recipient receives a kidney from a stranger, and transplants are enabled that otherwise would not have taken place.
The experts involved in the transplant say that involving multiple hospitals created even more possibilities for matches, but it also made the procedure more complex.
"We performed a similar six-way domino procedure involving three hospitals earlier this year. We managed to perform all those surgeries on the same day. However, adding two more recipients, two more donors and another hospital meant that we needed a multi-hospital team of eight anesthesiologists, 16 nurses and nine surgeons. The logistics being that much more complicated, we decided it was best to spread the surgeries over several days, the first on June 15 and the last, July 6," says Montgomery.
What makes the new model interesting is the fact that apart from sheer logistics, performing large numbers of transplants on one day puts a lot of strain on the doctors, nurses and staff at each hospital, and also ties up too many operating rooms.
Montgomery believes that it will serve as a blueprint for a national KPD program in which kidneys will be transported around the country, resulting in an estimated 1,500 additional transplants each year. Source-ANI John Hopkins Hospital
9 comments:
I don't think about this as much as I should. Thanks for the eye opener.
I'm learning more about you every time I read your blog! A kidney donor! What an unselfish, loving, gift!
I, too, am a donor! It is awesome that they have managed to do this! I saw it done once.....on Grey's Anatomy!!! LOLOLOLOL
What a miracle! I am a donor!
Well....that's just about the coolest thing ever! Praises to God for His wisdom and knowledge being passed on to us. Blessings, SusanD
What a blessing you have been to your sweetheart and to your family.
I love you,
Daddy
papa
This is absolute incredible news and what a Godsend for people who have been on transplant lists for a long time.
Thank you for spreading the word!
YEAH to all of the donors! I desperately wanted to be one, but am no longer able to due to the cancer and the treatment. But I have to tell you - at the transplant centre here in my city, patients did an art project where they made ceramic tiles that expressed how they felt about their donor. I have never cried so much in all of my life, and I offered a silent "Thank you" for the selfless acts of so many people!
As our three children got old enough for a driver's license, I sat down with each of them and talked about organ donation and how important it is. I'm proud to say all three of them, and myself are all organ donors. Also when they turned 17, I took each of them to a blood drive, hoping it would inspire them to be blood donors. Sadly, not so much. They like tattoos better. Just goes to show, you can't win 'em all.
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