A three-year old child was suffering from a major disorder in which the urine tends to go back to the kidney. A team of doctors has conducted an ABO incompatible kidney transplant on the youngest child in the SAARC region. The team at Medanta The Medicity conducted the path breaking surgery on a three-year-old child weighing 10 kg, who by birth had a condition called 'reflux nephropathy'.
‘Following six months of despair, a three-year old gets blood group-incompatible kidney transplant, in SAARC region.’
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Pratyasha, had chronic kidney failure at the age of 3. She required an early kidney transplant, but there were no blood group compatible donors. An attempt was made to swap the donors with other families and for cadaveric donation list, but nothing materialized. After six months of desperate search, the Kidney and Urology Institute at Medanta hospital planned to take mother as a donor which was a blood group incompatible transplant. Child was B+ and mother was A+.
Speaking on the occasion, Dr Sidharth Sethi, Consultant, Pediatric Nephrology and Pediatric Renal Transplant, Medanta, The Medicity, said, "We had already done India's first Pediatric blood group incompatible kidney transplant on a 12 years-old child in October 2014.
The major risk of blood group incompatible transplant is hyperacute rejection (kidney may stop working the same day of transplant)." "Looking at the criticality of the surgery, we designed a protocol with immunoadsorption column to remove the antibodies, and then conducted the transplant on 5th April.
Since, the mother had a different blood group, the child received renal transplant with mother as the donor, with a designed desensitization and immunosuppressive protocol," he added. "The child responded amazingly post-transplant, and is doing great with stable graft function.
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The child is currently completely normal, and leading a normal life," noted Sethi. The shortage of cadaveric donation (donation after death) for transplant is a global problem. Statistics suggest that about 2,20,000 people in India are waiting for a kidney transplant; out of which, only 7,000 of them are able to receive a transplant every year.
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This is because of the increasing discrepancy between the number of available deceased donor organs and the number of patients waiting for a transplant but also, because of the better survival rates found in living donor transplants."
"This is to emphasize to the general public and doctors that ABO incompability does not always mean loss of hope for children and adults with end stage renal disease.
We now accept blood group incompatible living donors, following our successful patients. We have now done more than 50 blood group incompatible kidney transplants in our centre, with Pratyasha being the youngest in India and SAARC," he added. Dr Prasun Ghosh, Associate Director-Renal Transplantation, said, "Pratyasha was 3 years old, weighing 10 kg, which put her at additional risk of rejection and also surgical complications due to smaller size of the child.
Her abdomen was small, hence putting an adult sized kidney into small abdomen was technically demanding. There is also a risk of clotting in blood vessels, when small vessels of child are joined to donor's kidney. Pratayasha's surgery went smooth with no post-surgery complications."
Source-ANI