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Virus found in pig heart that was used in human transplant

Members of the surgical team show the pig heart for transplant into a patient.
Members of the surgical team show the pig heart that was transplanted into patient David Bennett Sr. in Baltimore on Jan. 7.
(Mark Teske / University of Maryland School of Medicine )
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Researchers trying to learn what killed the first person to receive a heart transplant from a pig have discovered the organ harbored an animal virus but cannot yet say whether it played a role in the man’s death.

A Maryland man, 57-year-old David Bennett Sr., died in March, two months after the groundbreaking experimental transplant. University of Maryland doctors said Thursday that they found an unwelcome surprise — viral DNA inside the pig heart.

They did not find signs that this bug, called porcine cytomegalovirus, was causing an active infection.

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But a major worry about animal-to-human transplants is the risk that it could introduce new kinds of infections to people.

Because some viruses are “latent,” meaning they lurk without causing disease, “it could be a hitchhiker,” Dr. Bartley Griffith, the surgeon who performed Bennett’s transplant, told the Associated Press.

Still, development is underway of more sophisticated tests to “make sure that we don’t miss these kinds of viruses,” said Dr. Muhammad Mohiuddin, scientific director of the university’s xenotransplant program.

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The animal virus was first reported by MIT Technology Review, citing a scientific presentation Griffith gave to the American Society of Transplantation last month.

For decades, doctors have tried using animal organs to save human lives without success. Bennett, who was dying and ineligible for a human heart transplant, underwent the last-ditch operation using a heart from a pig genetically modified to lower the risk that his immune system would rapidly reject such a foreign organ.

The Maryland team said the donor pig was healthy, had passed testing required by the Food and Drug Administration to check for infections, and was raised in a facility designed to prevent animals from spreading infections.

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Revivicor, the company that provided the animal, declined to comment.

Griffith said his patient, while very ill, had been recovering fairly well from the transplant when one morning he woke up worse, with symptoms similar to those of an infection.

Doctors ran tests to try to understand the cause and gave Bennett a variety of antibiotics, antiviral medication and an immune-boosting treatment. But the pig heart became swollen, filled with fluid and eventually quit functioning.

“What was the virus doing, if anything, that might have caused the swelling in his heart?” Griffith asked. “Honestly we don’t know.”

The reaction also didn’t appear to be a typical organ rejection, he said, noting the investigation still is underway.

Meanwhile doctors at other medical centers around the country have been experimenting with animal organs in donated human bodies and hope to attempt formal studies in living patients soon. It’s not clear how the pig virus will affect those plans.

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