British boy who had first windpipe transplant is thriving two years on
British boy with first windpipe transplant is thriving two years on - and free from medication
- Ciaran has grown four inches in height and returned to school since the pioneering surgery
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Ciaran Finn-Lynch, pictured in 2010, had a windpipe transplant made with his own stem cells
A British boy who made medical history by having a new windpipe built from his own stem cells is still doing well two years after the operation.
Doctors say Ciaran Finn-Lynch, 13, from Northern Ireland, has grown four inches in height and returned to school since the surgery.
He is continuing to live a normal life free from medication to stop his immune system rejecting the transplant.
Ciaran was the first child in the world to undergo the pioneering tracheal transplant.
The procedure involved seeding stem cells taken from Ciaran's bone marrow into the collagen "skeleton" of a donor windpipe stripped of its own cells.
Once the structure was implanted, the stem cells matured, grew and divided to create a new organ.
A groundbreaking feature of the treatment was that the stem cells were allowed to mature in Ciaran's body, rather than in a laboratory "bioreactor".
Ciaran, a keen drummer, underwent the operation at London's Great Ormond Street Hospital in March 2010.
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ShareThe surgery was a desperate attempt to save his life after earlier treatment failed.
The boy was born with a condition called Long Segment Tracheal Stenosis which left him with a very narrow windpipe, making it hard to breathe.
EnlargeA follow-up report published in The Lancet medical journal today said the new organ had strengthened and showed no signs of rejection.
Doctors called for more research to speed up the recovery of future patients and increase the availability of donor windpipes, or tracheas.
Dr Paolo Macchiarini from AOU Careggi Hospital prepares a windpipe for a teenage transplant patient in 2010
Martin Birchall, Professor of Laryngology at University College Hospital Ear Institute, said: 'Since the treatment plan for Ciaran was devised in an emergency, we used a novel mix of techniques that have proved successful in treating other conditions.
'To minimise delays, we bypassed the usual process of growing cells in the laboratory over a period of weeks, and instead opted to grow the cells inside the body, in a similar manner to treatments currently being trialled with patients who have had heart attacks.
'We need more research on stem cells grown deliberately inside the body, rather than grown first in a laboratory over a long time.
'This research should help to convert one-off successes such as this into more widely available clinical treatments for thousands of children with severe tracheal problems worldwide.'
Prof Birchall was a member of the transplant team led by Professor Martin Elliott, from Great Ormond Street Hospital.
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