Swiss
surgeons performed the first organ transplantation between HIV-positive
men in October 2015 but waited six months to share the news
Istock
Surgeons in
Switzerland have accomplished the first-ever liver transplantation
between two HIV-positive patients. Both adult men had been treated for
their HIV infection with antiretroviral therapy, for many years.
Switzerland authorised organ transplantation between
HIV-positive individuals in 2007. Eight years were then necessary to
prepare for the procedure, and to address the problem of organ rejection
by the receptor.
Rejection is a risk in any organ transplant, but
immunosuppressive medications – which reduce the strength of the immune
system – have proved to be effective anti-rejection drugs in recent
years. In the case of HIV patients, however, doctors were concerned that
the effects of such medicine would be very harmful. They thought it
would further lower their body defences against HIV, worsening the
infection and making them more vulnerable to other diseases and
infections.
However, HIV patients
who take antiretroviral therapy often see their HIV viral load
decrease, and they become less vulnerable to getting other diseases.
Weakening their immune system by giving them immunosuppressants, as is
always the case after any transplant procedure, thus becomes less risky.
Long-term success
In October 2015, when
a 75-year-old HIV-positive man died from cerebral haemorrhage after
agreeing to give his organs, the transplant of his liver into another
HIV-infected man was approved. The operation was a success, but the
hospital decided to wait six months to communicate on the results, to
see how the patient's health evolved in the long term, and how he
tolerated the immunosuppressants. The doctors are now confident that
taking these drugs has not led to new diseases appearing or to the HIV
infection worsening.
A careful analysis of
the donor's and recipient's HIV strains before the operation was also
key, to reduce the risk of introducing more aggressive HIV strains into
the recipient.
"Five
months after transplantation, HIV viraemia remains undetectable. This
observation supports the inclusion of appropriate HIV-positive donors
for transplants specifically allocated to HIV-positive recipients," the
authors write.
Switzerland has not
been able to enjoy its position as a pioneer for long. In March 2016,
American surgeons performed a similar operation with success, opening
the way for more interventions of this kind in the near future.
First successful liver transplant between two HIV-positive men performed in Switzerland
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