Aporte a la rutina de la trinchera asistencial donde los conocimientos se funden con las demandas de los pacientes, sus necesidades y las esperanzas de permanecer en la gracia de la SALUD.
viernes, 19 de enero de 2024
She’s hellbent on solving the organ shortage with ‘designer pigs.’ Just don’t keep her waiting Sharon Begley By Sharon Begley
https://www.statnews.com/2017/04/06/crispr-pig-organs-transplant-luhan-yang/?utm_campaign=morning_rounds&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=290577490&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-88p43AuI1eKGqEOZFyq1XvWFhsQo200SBSn03L5us-U5OyuODkTqUdK-FSVJCAKmHMXU4JGYw2bCgNmUFO1pgzwl5Fqw&utm_content=290577490&utm_source=hs_email
When I hear about eGenesis, a pioneer in xenotransplantation deploying CRISPR to edit viruses out of pig organs, I think of its mission to solve the shortage of organs. That’s still its goal, but now the company is working with researchers at Penn Medicine to use human-friendly pig organs as a bridge for critically ill patients waiting to get better or to receive a human transplant. The technique is called extracorporeal perfusion and it circulates a patient’s blood through a genetically engineered pig organ kept alive in an incubator. Yesterday researchers said the procedure passed its first test in a brain-dead human.
STAT’s Megan Molteni describes it as “kind of like dialysis, except the guts of the machine are literal guts, from a pig.” Mike Curtis, eGenesis's CEO, told her “it’s not xenotransplant, but it’s a technology and a product that can fulfill a huge unmet need.” Caveat: Data from this experiment have not been published or made available as a preprint. Read more.
https://www.statnews.com/2024/01/18/egenesis-crispr-pig-liver-tested-in-brain-dead-patient/?utm_campaign=morning_rounds&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=290577490&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8JHU0UepejBlmeMYPBy9TzCRKn44trGmyRYIliNdWlKi5NUP-4GHIh-MwRpLsP1nUnDsB6vRYLvCGYlMi2CLsttB4j6A&utm_content=290577490&utm_source=hs_email
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