Scientists at the University of Minnesota have successfully transplanted rat kidneys that were thawed after up to 100 days in ultracold storage — a milestone that could one day revolutionize how and when human organs are transplanted.
The discovery, publicized by the U on Thursday, averts the formation of ice crystals that kills living tissue when frozen and the irreparable damage from uneven thawing.
John Bischof has been confronting those hurdles for years, and the mechanical engineering professor said he felt a sense of history-making when a frozen-then-thawed kidney resumed healthy function in a rat. Four more transplants produced the same results, with the kidneys functioning normally in 30 days, according to results published in Nature Communications, a peer-reviewed science journal.
"All of our research over more than a decade ... has shown that this process should work, then that it could work, but now we've shown that it actually does work," said Bischof, director of the U's Institute for Engineering in Medicine.
Effective cryopreservation has been a goal in many medical, biological and agricultural industries, but it offers Holy Grail potential for organ transplantation. Thousands of kidneys, hearts and livers are transplanted every year in a race-against-time system that procures organs right after donors die and rushes them while still viable to critically ill recipients.
Up to 20% of donor kidneys go to waste, often because they don't reach recipients in time.
One solution is to expand the supply. U researchers have studied transplants from animals to humans of pig islets or pancreases, and using human stem cells to grow biocompatible hearts or other organs.
Such alternatives remain experimental, increasing the need to optimize the existing supply. LifeSource, the local organ procurement agency, and Allina Health conducted a test flight of a drone carrying a pancreas to Mercy Hospital in Coon Rapids in 2021 to see if the technology could hasten delivery. Allina also participated in the trial of now-approved "heart-in-a-box" technology that keeps hearts beating in transit and maintains their viability.