OrganEx tells cells not to die PHOTO
Researchers have developed a system that can halt or reverse cell damage.
They hope it will prevent cell death in organs needed for transplant surgery, DW reports.
Organ transplantation is an incredibly tricky medical process. There aren't enough human donor organs to help all the people who need them. Waiting lists are very long. Even if you do get a donor organ, one of the hardest things is just getting that organ to you before it dies through cell damage. But a new technology may be able to mimic a living body and extend the time that donor organs survive.
Tens of thousands of people need organ transplants
In the United States, at least 106,000 people are on the waitlist to receive a vital organ transplant. Every nine minutes, another person joins the list, says the US Department of Health and Human Services. And every day, 17 people die waiting.
In South Africa, roughly 5,000 people are waiting for a donor organ, according to that country's national body for the promotion of organ and tissue donation, the Organ Donor Foundation. In 2019, surgeons across the country carried out 356 solid organ transplants, which do not include transplants of tissue, such as bone, skin, corneas or heart valves.
And in Germany, there were roughly 8,700 people on the organ transplant waitlist at the end of 2021, most of them waiting for kidneys. Data from the Federal Health Ministry says that about half that number joined the waitlist in 2021 and 826 patients on it died that year.
Human organ transplants rely on many factors
Finding a perfect match is difficult.
First, the blood type and age of the donor and recipient need to line up. Second, the donor and recipient cannot be located too far away from one another, since an organ can only survive without blood flow for a few hours.
But now a team of researchers from Yale University has developed a method that prevents cells from dying and initiates cell recovery. The OrganEx technology could potentially keep organs alive outside the body for longer, so they can travel longer distances for transplantation.
OrganEx 'tells' cells not to die
In a press briefing on August 2, 2022, the scientists described the process as "steering cells away from dying." But what does that mean?
If, for example, a person suffers a stroke or dies, blood stops flowing in the body and the cells within our organs stop receiving the oxygen and nutrients they need to survive. That can cause cell damage and if cells get damaged beyond repair, our organs die.
But "cells don't die as quickly as we assumed they do," said Zvonimir Vrselja, who is part of the team behind the OrganEx technology. "With this study, we show that if properly intervened, we can tell [the cells] not to die."
The researchers, whose study is published in the journal Nature, experimented on around 100 pigs to see whether cell structures could be saved, or cell damage could be reversed if OrganEx was employed one hour after they had simulated death.
The technology has two parts. One is a device that simulates the heart and lung function of a living mammal and pushes a mix of blood and a drug cocktail to the organs. The other is the drug cocktail or synthetic perfusate. This liquid is made up of 13 chemical compounds and contains drugs that are already in clinical use to target issues such as cell death and coagulation.
One hour post-death, the pigs, who had been anaesthetized so they could not feel their hearts being stopped, were hooked up to the OrganEx machine. The machine has sensors that transmit information about metabolic and circulation parameters in real-time. Then the system pumped the perfusate to the animal's organs for six hours.
Vrselja said the experiments showed that "we can restore certain cell functions some time after death."