Preventing xenograft rejection is one of the greatest challenges of transplantation medicine. Here, we describe a reproducible, long-term survival of cardiac xenografts from alpha 1-3 galactosyltransferase gene knockout pigs, which express human complement regulatory protein CD46 and human thrombomodulin (GTKO.hCD46.hTBM), that were transplanted into baboons. Our immunomodulatory drug regimen includes induction with anti-thymocyte globulin and alphaCD20 antibody, followed by maintenance with mycophenolate mofetil and an intensively dosed alphaCD40 (2C10R4) antibody. Median (298 days) and longest (945 days) graft survival in five consecutive recipients using this regimen is significantly prolonged over our recently established survival bench...
Binding of natural anti-pig antibodies in humans and nonhuman primates to carbohydrate antigens expr...
Background: Generation of \u3b11,3-galactosyltransferase gene-knockout (GTKO) pigs that are also tra...
Background: The demand for donated human hearts far exceeds the number available. Xenotransplantatio...
Preventing xenograft rejection is one of the greatest challenges of transplantation medicine. Here, ...
ObjectivesCardiac transplantation and available mechanical alternatives are the only possible soluti...
ObjectivesTransplantation is limited by a lack of human organ donors. Organs derived from animals, m...
AbstractObjective: Pig hearts transplanted into unmedicated newborn baboons do not undergo hyperacut...
Heart transplantation is the only cure for patients with terminal cardiac failure, but the supply of...
Xenotransplantation has the potential to alleviate the organ shortage that prevents many patients wi...
Heart transplantation is the only cure for patients with terminal cardiac failure, but the supply of...
Background: Inhibition of hyperacute rejection (HAR) and sustained graft survival have been demonstr...
Galactosyl-transferase knockout (GT-KO) pigs represent the latest major progress to reduce immune re...
none19Galactosyl-transferase knockout (GT-KO) pigs represent the latest major progress to reduce imm...
PURPOSE: Major hurdles in oXHTx are the delayed xenograft rejection, the early perioperative cardiac...
in xenotransplantation studies (pig to non-human primates) it was demonstrated that alpha-1,3 galact...
Binding of natural anti-pig antibodies in humans and nonhuman primates to carbohydrate antigens expr...
Background: Generation of \u3b11,3-galactosyltransferase gene-knockout (GTKO) pigs that are also tra...
Background: The demand for donated human hearts far exceeds the number available. Xenotransplantatio...
Preventing xenograft rejection is one of the greatest challenges of transplantation medicine. Here, ...
ObjectivesCardiac transplantation and available mechanical alternatives are the only possible soluti...
ObjectivesTransplantation is limited by a lack of human organ donors. Organs derived from animals, m...
AbstractObjective: Pig hearts transplanted into unmedicated newborn baboons do not undergo hyperacut...
Heart transplantation is the only cure for patients with terminal cardiac failure, but the supply of...
Xenotransplantation has the potential to alleviate the organ shortage that prevents many patients wi...
Heart transplantation is the only cure for patients with terminal cardiac failure, but the supply of...
Background: Inhibition of hyperacute rejection (HAR) and sustained graft survival have been demonstr...
Galactosyl-transferase knockout (GT-KO) pigs represent the latest major progress to reduce immune re...
none19Galactosyl-transferase knockout (GT-KO) pigs represent the latest major progress to reduce imm...
PURPOSE: Major hurdles in oXHTx are the delayed xenograft rejection, the early perioperative cardiac...
in xenotransplantation studies (pig to non-human primates) it was demonstrated that alpha-1,3 galact...
Binding of natural anti-pig antibodies in humans and nonhuman primates to carbohydrate antigens expr...
Background: Generation of \u3b11,3-galactosyltransferase gene-knockout (GTKO) pigs that are also tra...
Background: The demand for donated human hearts far exceeds the number available. Xenotransplantatio...