
British girl’s heart heals itself after transplant
LONDON: British doctors designed a radical solution to save a girl
with major heart problems in 1995: they implanted a donor heart directly
onto her own failing heart.
After 10 years with two blood pumping organs, Hannah Clark’s faulty
one did what many experts had thought impossible: it healed itself
enough so that doctors could remove the donated heart.
But she also had a price to pay: the drugs Clark took to prevent her
body from rejecting the donated heart led to malignant cancer that
required chemotherapy.

After recovery. |

This April 12, 2006 picture shows Hannah Clark, of Cardiff
Wales, who has now made a full recovery. |
Details of Clark’s revolutionary transplant and follow-up care were
published online Tuesday July 14 in the medical journal Lancet.
“This shows that the heart can indeed repair itself if given the
opportunity,” said Dr. Douglas Zipes, a past president of the American
College of Cardiology. Zipes was not linked to Clark’s treatment or to
the Lancet paper. “The heart apparently has major regenerative powers,
and it is now a key to find out how they work.” In 1994, when Clark was
eight months old, she developed severe heart failure and doctors put her
on a waiting list to get a new heart.
But Clark’s heart difficulties caused problems with her lungs,
meaning she also needed a lung transplant.
To avoid doing a risky heart and lung transplant, doctors decided to
try something completely different.
Sir Magdi Yacoub of Imperial College London, one of the world’s top
heart surgeons, said that if Clark’s heart was given a time-out, it
might be able to recover on its own. So in 1995 Yacoub and others
grafted a donor heart from a 5-month-old directly onto Clark’s own
heart.
After four and a half years, both hearts were working fine, so Yacoub
and colleagues decided not to take out the extra heart.
The powerful drugs Clark was taking to prevent her from rejecting the
donor heart then caused cancer, which led to chemotherapy. Even when
doctors lowered the doses of drugs to suppress Clark’s immune system,
the cancer spread, and Clark’s body eventually rejected the donor
heart.Luckily, by that time, Clark’s own heart seemed to have fully
recovered.
In February 2006, Dr. Victor Tsang of Great Ormond Street Hospital in
London, Yacoub and other doctors removed Clark’s donor heart.Since then,
Clark “now 16 years old” has started playing sports, gotten a part-time
job, and plans to go back to school in September.
“Thanks to this operation, I’ve now got a normal life just like all
of my friends,” said Clark, who lives near Cardiff.Her parents marvelled
at her recovery, and said that at one point during Clark’s illness, they
were told she would be dead within 12 hours.Miguel Uva, chairman of the
European Society of Cardiology’s group on cardiovascular surgery, called
Clark’s case “a miracle,” adding that it was rare for patients’ hearts
to simply get better on their own.
“We have no way of knowing which patients will recover and which ones
won’t,” Uva said. |