News:

This week IPhone 15 Pro winner is karn
You can be too a winner! Become the top poster of the week and win valuable prizes.  More details are You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login 

Main Menu

Fox Health: Alabama woman has pig kidney removed after a record 130 days

Started by riky, April 13, 2025, 01:01:44 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

riky

Alabama woman has pig kidney removed after a record 130 days

An Alabama woman had her pig kidney transplant removed at NYU Langone Health and is back on dialysis after having it in place a record 130 days.
                       
                       
                           

An You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login living with a pig kidney for a record 130 days had it removed after her body began to reject it.

Towana Looney from Gadsden, Ala., returned home following her April 4 surgery at NYU Langone Health.

Looney thanked her doctors for "the opportunity to be part of this incredible research."

You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login

Although doctors now have her back on dialysis, the experience gave doctors much-needed information on the journey to a solution.

"Though the outcome is not what anyone wanted, I know a lot was learned from my 130 days with a pig kidney – and that this can help and inspire many others in their journey to overcoming kidney disease," Looney told The Associated Press.

Looney has been receiving dialysis since 2016 and was abnormally primed to reject a human kidney, according to a report by the AP.

Since the procedure, she has called herself "superwoman" and has been able to live longer than anyone with a gene-edited pig organ. Looney had the organ from her Nov. 25 transplant until early April.

You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login

Dr. Robert Montgomery, Looney's surgeon, said the rejection is being investigated. 

He and her doctors decided it would be less risky to remove the pig's kidney than to try saving it.

"We did the safe thing," Montgomery told the AP. "She's no worse off than she was before (the xenotransplant) and she would tell you she's better off because she had this 4½ month break from dialysis."

Looney suffered an infection prior and her immune-suppressing anti-rejection drugs were slightly lowered, Montgomery said. At the same time, her immune system was reactivating after the transplant. Those factors may have combined to damage the new kidney, he said.

In May of last year, Lisa Pisano, the You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login from a gene-edited pig, also had to have her kidney removed to resume dialysis.

More than 100,000 people are on the U.S. transplant waiting list, most who You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, and thousands die waiting. In hopes of filling the shortage of donated organs, several biotech companies are genetically modifying pigs, so their organs are more humanlike, less likely to be destroyed by people's immune systems.


Source: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login