Extracorporeal liver cross-circulation using transgenic xenogeneic pig livers with brain-dead human decedents
Summary
Extracorporeal liver cross-circulation (ELC) using genetically modified pig livers may address an unmet need for temporary liver support in patients with acute or acute-on-chronic liver failure. This study used the ELC platform to evaluate early immune responses and assess xenogeneic liver physiological support in a human decedent model. Four human decedents underwent ELC using pig livers with a triple glycan knockout; insertion of seven human transgenes and inactivation of pig endogenous
Content
# Extracorporeal liver cross-circulation using transgenic xenogeneic pig livers with brain-dead human decedents
*Published: 2026 Mar*
Extracorporeal liver cross-circulation (ELC) using genetically modified pig
livers may address an unmet need for temporary liver support in patients with
acute or acute-on-chronic liver failure. This study used the ELC platform to
evaluate early immune responses and assess xenogeneic liver physiological
support in a human decedent model. Four human decedents underwent ELC using pig
livers with a triple glycan knockout; insertion of seven human transgenes and
inactivation of pig endogenous retroviruses. Intravenous methylprednisolone was
administered for immunosuppression. In the case of decedents 1-3, ELC was
performed for 72-84 h with the native livers of the decedents remaining in situ.
In the case of decedent 4, hepatectomy was performed, followed by 48 h of
xenogeneic liver support exclusively using ELC. Biopsies of xenogeneic livers
demonstrated preserved parenchymal architecture, mild immune infiltration and
IgM deposition. Xenogeneic livers produced bile and supplemented native
hepatocellular function. In decedent 4, xenogeneic liver-only support after
hepatectomy maintained hemodynamic stability, normal pH, lactate, ammonia,
international normalized ratio and sustained metabolic function. This study
shows that ELC is feasible using xenogeneic livers with minimal
immunosuppression and can provide effective liver support.
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-025-04196-3