Abstract
Facile gene editing has accelerated progress in pig to non-human-primate (NHP) renal xenotransplantation, however, outcomes are considered inferior to NHP-allotransplantation. This systematic review and outcomes analysis of life-sustaining NHP-renal transplantation aimed to benchmark “preclinical success” and aggregated 1051 NHP-to-NHP or pig-to-NHP transplants across 88 articles. Although protocols varied, NHP-allotransplantation survival (1, 3, 12months, 67.5%, 37.1%, 13.2%) was significantly greater than NHP-xenotransplantation (1, 3, 12 months, 38.8%, 14.0%, 4.4%; p
Author supplied keywords
- animal models: nonhuman primate
- basic (laboratory) research/science
- clinical xenotransplantation
- gene therapy
- kidney transplantation/nephrology
- meta-analysis
- non-human-primate transplantation
- pathology/histopathology
- renal allotransplantation
- renal xenotransplantation
- translational research/science
- xenotransplantation
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Firl, D. J., & Markmann, J. F. (2022). Measuring success in pig to non-human-primate renal xenotransplantation: Systematic review and comparative outcomes analysis of 1051 life-sustaining NHP renal allo- and xeno-transplants. American Journal of Transplantation, 22(6), 1527–1536. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.16994
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