|      A donated human liver has been kept alive, warm and functioning    outside a human being on a newly-developed machine and then successfully    transplanted into patients in a medical world first. A British team of    doctors, engineers and surgeons announcing the achievement on Friday said it    could be common practice in hospitals across the developed world within a few    years, up to doubling the number of livers available for transplant. So far the procedure has    been performed on two patients on Britain's liver transplant    waiting list and both are making excellent recoveries, the medical team told    a news conference. "It was astounding    to see an initially cold, grey liver flushing    with color once hooked up to our machine and performing as it would within    the body," said Constantin Coussios, a    professor of biomedical engineering at Oxford    University and one of the machine's co-inventors. "What was even more    amazing was to see the same liver transplanted into a patient who is now    walking around." Currently livers destined    for transplant are kept "on ice" in a process which cools them to    slow down their metabolism and does not keep them functioning as they would    inside a body. This system has worked    for several decades, but can also often lead to livers becoming damaged and    rendered unfit for use in patients who need them. Surgeons say keeping    livers "on ice" beyond 14 hours starts becoming risky, although    they can last up to 20 hours. Hepatitis infection,    alcohol abuse and drug-induced cholestasis - a blockage in the flow of bile    from the liver - can all cause liver failure.    Some patients with liver cancer can also    benefit from a transplant. Around 13,000 liver    transplants are carried out each year in Europe and the United States, but    there is a combined waiting list of around 30,000 patients who need a new    liver. Experts say up to a    quarter of these patients die while they are waiting. At the same time, more    than 2,000 livers are discarded every year because they are either damaged by    oxygen deprivation or do not survive the cold preservation process. The new technology,    developed by Coussios together with Peter Friend, director of the Oxford    Transplant Centre, preserves the liver at body temperature and    "perfuses" it - supplying it with oxygenated red blood cells to    keep it alive. "This device is the    very first completely automated liver perfusion device of its kind,"    Coussios said. "These first clinical cases confirm that we can support    human livers outside the body, keep them alive and functioning on our machine    and then, hours later, successfully transplant them into a patient." "I FEEL SO    ALIVE" The device can keep a    liver functioning normally - just as if in a person, with blood circulating    through its capillaries and bile being produced - outside the body for 24    hours or more. The results from the    first two transplants using the new technology, carried out at King's College    Hospital (KCH) in London last month, suggest the device could be useful for    all patients needing liver transplants, Field told reporters. The new device could also    mean livers which would otherwise be discarded as unfit for transplantation    could be preserved and made viable - potentially as much as doubling the number    of organs available for transplant, he said. "If we can introduce    technology like this into everyday practice, it could be a real, bona fide    game changer for transplantation as we know it," said Nigel Heaton,    director of transplant surgery at KCH and part of the team that carried out    the first two transplants using the device. Coussios and Friend have    been researching the technology for the device since 1994 and are developing    it through an Oxford University spin-off company called OrganOx. The first person to    receive a transplanted liver kept alive on the OrganOx system was 62-year-old    Briton Ian Christie. He is still recovering from the surgery but said in a    statement he was getting better day by day. "I just feel so alive,"    he said. Christie was told last    year he had cirrhosis of the liver and had only 12 to 18 months to live    unless he got a transplant. "I was placed on the waiting list but...I    was very worried." Having been through the    surgery, he said: "I feel better than I've felt for 10 to 15 years, even    allowing for the pain and wound that's got to heal." The team now plans to run    a pilot trial with 20 more liver transplant patients    at KCH. Coussios said successful results of that trial would allow OrganOx to    apply for marketing authority, meaning the device could be on the market by    as early as 2014.  |    
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