Login / Register

Username:


Password: [Lost?]



New User? Click here for your FREE subscription



Espanol
Espanol Post a healthcare recruiting ad

Follow Us


NEWS-Line on Twitter NEWS-Line on Facebook NEWS-Line on Google+ NEWS-Line on LinkedIn NEWS-Line on Pinterest

NYU Langone Performs First U.S. Heart Transplant Using Novel Organ Revitalization Technique | NEWS-Line for Espanol
 


NYU Langone Performs First U.S. Heart Transplant Using Novel Organ Revitalization Technique


Source:

The NYU Langone Transplant Institute became the first center in the United States to transplant a heart using a novel method in which, after the heart has stopped beating and death has been declared, surgeons place the organ donor on cardiopulmonary bypass and blood is circulated through the body.

This enables transplant surgeons to assess a heart for transplant while mitigating potential injury to all organs. It also holds the promise of significantly increasing the number of heart transplants from donors who have died from cardiac arrest as opposed to the typical donation after brain death.

The procedure was performed by a team of cardiothoracic surgeons, anesthesiologists, intensivists, nurses, perfusionists, and others from the Transplant Institute, in collaboration with LiveOnNY, the organ procurement organization. It is the first in an ongoing research study to evaluate the feasibility and safety of the protocol.

"This groundbreaking transplant procedure is the culmination of nearly two years of hard work to ensure all the ethical, logistical, and regulatory needs and requirements were met," says Nader Moazami, MD, professor of cardiothoracic surgery and Surgical Director of Heart Transplantation & Mechanical Circulatory Support at NYU Langone.

Other transplant centers in the country have recently launched clinical trials to study Donation after Circulatory Death, or DCD, using a device which circulates warm, oxygenated blood through the heart after it has been removed from the body. NYU Langone's innovative protocol uses the standard cardiopulmonary bypass used in cardiac surgery to reestablish circulation while the heart is still in the body.

"We're thrilled with the success of this first transplant surgery, which has promise to increase not only heart donation rates, but other lifesaving organs as well," says Zachary N. Kon, MD, associate professor of cardiothoracic surgery and Surgical Director of Lung Transplantation at NYU Langone. "One of the advantages of this novel method is that it gives all organs the potential benefit of restoring perfusion prior to procurement."

While transplant centers across the country have made great strides to address organ shortages, the demand still far exceeds the supply. According to the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network, there were 3,399 heart transplants in 2018, with 3,800 patient remaining on the wait list, resulting in 314 deaths and 330 becoming too sick for transplantation.

Most heart donations in the United States are from patients who are declared brain dead; experts hypothesize that the widespread dissemination of controlled DCD could increase the donor pool by as much as 20 percent.

NYU Langone developed the new protocol in collaboration with LiveOnNY, New York City's organ procurement organization.

"This quantum leap forward in American transplantation is a game changer for those desperately awaiting heart transplants by expanding the pool of suitable donors," says Amy L. Friedman, MD, Executive Vice President and Chief Medical Officer at LiveOnNY, which helped NYU Langone identify the organ donor. "It resulted from the generosity and commitment of this one donor and their loved ones who honored the donor's wish to save the lives of others."

Drs. Kon and Moazami are co-authors on an article published January 8 in the American Journal of Transplantation, investigating the ethical and logistical concerns for establishing controlled DCD heart transplantation in the United States. They collaborated with colleagues in NYU Langone's Division of Medical Ethics, Brendan Parent, JD, adjunct instructor in the Department of Population Health, and Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor of Bioethics in the Department of Population Health, among others.

"The NYU Langone Transplant Institute is constantly seeking to drive discovery and innovation in the field of transplantation, to help all those waiting for a lifesaving organ," says Robert Montgomery, MD, DPhil, Professor of Surgery and Director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute. "This is an exciting advancement that will likely have a major impact on transplantation rates in this country."

SOURCE NYU Langone Health

Related Links
http://www.med.nyu.edu




Post not cached because it doesn't exist


Share This!


en Espanol Jobs


ACADEMIC POSITIONS: Nursing Instructor (2 positions available) - Annual Salary $58,777 - $113,797 & ADMINISTRATIVE POSITION: Nursing Program Director - Annual Salary $75,571 - $129,252

Palo Verde Community College
California

ACADEMIC POSITIONS: Nursing Instructor (2 positions available) - Annual Salary $58,777 - $113,797 & ADMINISTRATIVE POSITION: Nursing Program Director - Annual Salary $75,571 - $129,252

Palo Verde Community College
National

ACADEMIC POSITIONS: Nursing Instructor (2 positions available) - Annual Salary $58,777 - $113,797 & ADMINISTRATIVE POSITION: Nursing Program Director - Annual Salary $75,571 - $129,252

Palo Verde Community College
Faculty

Speech -Language Pathologist - Special Education Program (Preschool/School Age)

Shield Institute
Bronx, New York

BILINGUAL SPEECH/LANGUAGE PATHOLOGIST - (Spanish/English) Preschool Special Education Program

Shield Institute
Bronx, New York

• Speech Language Pathologists • OTs & COTAs • PTs & PTAs • ABA Providers • Social workers • Special Education Teachers • Service Coordinators •

Kids Time Therapies
New York City, New York

More Jobs
(Dismiss) Thank you for visiting NEWS-Line! Please sign up, login, or follow us on your favorite social networks
to receive custom tailored eNews, job listings, and educational opportunities for your specific profession.