Investigación

Investigación relativa al trasplante de hígado en Mayo Clinic

Los médicos de Mayo Clinic investigan las innovaciones en el trasplante de hígado para mejorar la atención.

Los científicos, médicos y cirujanos de Mayo Clinic desarrollan perspectivas e innovaciones para el trasplante de hígado que permiten que los trasplantes sean seguros y estén disponibles para más personas. Llevan a cabo estudios de laboratorio, ensayos clínicos y otras investigaciones sobre diversos aspectos de problemas relacionados al trasplante de hígado, como por ejemplo:

  • Hígado bioartificial. Esta innovación ayuda a los pacientes a encarar la situación mientras esperan un donante de hígado. Los nuevos hígados bioartificiales, desarrollados por los médicos e investigadores de Mayo Clinic, utilizan células vivas de hígados de cerdo para filtrar la sangre del paciente en un proceso similar a aquel de la diálisis renal. El dispositivo está a prueba antes de estar disponible en clínicas y hospitales.
  • Complicaciones pulmonares de la enfermedad hepática. La investigación de las causas y los posibles tratamientos de la presión arterial pulmonar alta puede hacer posible un trasplante de hígado seguro en algunas personas.
  • Elastografía por resonancia magnética. Los médicos e investigadores de Mayo Clinic desarrollaron esta tecnología innovadora como una manera no invasiva de analizar la cicatrización del hígado. Algún día podría disminuir la necesidad de realizar biopsias de hígado en personas con enfermedad hepática.
  • Medicamentos inmunodepresores. Uno de los muchos estudios en esta área examina las lesiones mediadas por anticuerpos en trasplantes de hígado-riñón y cómo la realización de un trasplante múltiple puede arrojar mejores resultados. Mayo Clinic también está trabajando con Transplant Genomics Inc. para desarrollar, validar y comercializar pruebas de diagnóstico permitiendo inmunosupresión personalizada para receptores de trasplantes de órganos sólidos.
  • Maximización de donantes de órganos. Los cirujanos de trasplantes de Mayo descubrieron que los pacientes con cáncer de hígado tienen los mismos resultados beneficiosos utilizando órganos donados por pacientes que fallecieron por problemas cardíacos y no por muerte cerebral.
  • Terapias de células para enfermedades hepáticas. Esta investigación ofrece tratamientos nuevos potenciales para varias enfermedades hepáticas y podría mejorar el éxito del trasplante de hígado.
  • Sistema de triaje. Los investigadores de Mayo Clinic propusieron, diseñaron y analizaron originalmente el Modelo para Enfermedad Hepática Terminal. Este sistema prioriza a las personas que esperan un trasplante según la gravedad de su enfermedad y la urgencia con la que lo necesitan.

Los investigadores de Mayo Clinic a menudo colaboran con colegas de alrededor de los Estados Unidos y del extranjero comprometidos a mejorar los resultados y los cuidados de personas que padezcan una enfermedad hepática.

Tal vez tengas la oportunidad de participar en ensayos clínicos. Obtén más información sobre los diferentes estudios de investigación de trasplante de hígado que cuentan con el respaldo del Centro de Investigación de Trasplantes.

Laboratorios de subespecialidades hepáticas

Patobiología hepática

Regeneración hepática

Publicaciones

Mira una lista de publicaciones de los autores de Mayo Clinic en PubMed, un servicio de National Library of Medicine.

Lowering rejection in organ transplant

Mira la explicación de Mark Stegall, M.D., y Richard Daly, M.D., sobre cómo bajar el riesgo de rechazo en los trasplantes de órganos.

For 12 years, this is the routine that Pete Giannaris has had to accept, kidney dialysis three times a week. As vital as it is, he admits it can wear a guy down.

Pete Giannaris: I mean, even myself, I knew that, man, you know. It has taken a toll on my body.

Pete has dealt with kidney disease most of his life. Even receiving kidney transplants before, but this time was different. He was told he would almost certainly reject any donor organ.

Pete Giannaris: Not many people understand. Oh, you need a kidney. You get on the list. Two years later, you get your kidney and your fine. You know, it's not the story for everybody.

Mark Stegall, M.D. — Mayo Clinic transplant surgeon: About 80 percent of people who have had a previous transplant have antibodies against other tissue types. They also could have been exposed to foreign tissue types by a blood transfusion or even pregnancy.

Anissa Swanigan: I was devastated. Shocked. Didn't really see it coming.

Pregnancy delivered a double-blow to Anissa Swanigan. After giving birth a second time, her weakened heart condition advanced to heart failure and complications scarred her liver so badly it was failing too. Doctors told her she needed a double organ transplant.

Anissa Swanigan: It was the only way you're going to survive.

She had two big reasons to survive. Her two little boys. But, again, high levels of antibodies made her a very poor transplant candidate. Antibodies are a good thing when they help us fight disease. Vaccines, for example, trigger our immune systems to create antibodies. But for some of those waiting to receive life-saving organs, Mayo Clinic transplant surgeon and immunology researcher, Mark Stegall says, antibodies become the enemy.

Mark Stegall, M.D.: It's a big problem. There are about 9,000 people on the kidney transplant list in the United States right now who have really high levels of antibody to the point that they can't really get a transplant.

Pete is in that category, called highly sensitized. So Dr. Stegall and his team did a variety of things in advance to tip the odds in his favor. They carefully selected a living donor for which Pete would have the fewest antibodies. Also, drug researchers found a way to reduce antibody-caused rejection rates from 40% to less than 10%.

Mark Stegall, M.D.: One of the drugs that we were the first to use is a drug called eculizumab. If we give this drug, the antibody binds to the kidney but it doesn't cause the damage.

Pete had also gone through a number of rounds of an antibody filtering process called a plasma exchange. Then, to try to halt the production of new antibodies in his bone marrow, Dr. Stegall turned to an FDA-approved clinical trial at Mayo Clinic using a powerful drug.

Mark Stegall, M.D.: A drug called valcade which is actually used in the treatment of cancers of these antibody-secreting cells. But, of course, these are not cancer cells, these are normal cells.

Anissa also underwent drug and plasma exchange therapies, but her antibody levels were still so high doctors worried that her body might still reject the donor organs.

Richard Daly, M.D. — Mayo Clinic transplant surgeon: By the time the liver went in, the heart might already be irreversibly damaged by the antibodies. So we reversed the process and did the liver transplant first.

Why?

Surgical Director of Heart and Lung Transplantation at Mayo Clinic, Dr. Richard Daly, says the liver filters antibodies. In combined kidney-liver or heart-liver transplants, his team had observed a reduction in antibodies to that donor. However, in multiple organ transplants, hearts generally have to go in first because their tissues are more time sensitive. How does the Mayo team get around that?

Richard Daly, M.D.: Choreograph the whole process. We have to have the donor close enough by. We have to have the procurement done and be really completely ready for the organs when they arrive.

Anissa Swanigan: It seemed brilliant. Brilliant minds that they collaborated and they got together and figured out how to do this thing.

Pete Giannaris: I took a chance. I didn't have anything to lose. So either I stay on dialysis or a miracle happens and I get this kidney.

Innovation that makes a world of difference, one patient at a time.

Perfiles de la investigación

March 28, 2024