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Australian transplant girl makes medical history

Society Materials 24 January 2008 05:02 (UTC +04:00)

( dpa ) - An Australian liver-transplant patient has made medical history by spontaneously switching over to the immune system of her donor, doctors said Thursday.

When 15-year-old Demi-Lee Brennan received her donor kidney five years ago, her blood type was O, RhD-negative. Since then, it's changed to O, RhD-positive, the blood group of her donor.

Even more amazing is that stem cells from her new liver have penetrated her bone marrow, effectively resulting in a bone-marrow transplant.

"We consulted widely throughout the hospital and then looked at the medical literature and consulted colleagues around the world to see if anyone had seen this kind of thing before," Dr Michael Stormon of Sydney's Westmead Children's Hospital said. "No one had, so we were stunned and amazed."

Brennan took the customary drugs to prevent her body rejecting the liver of her 12-year-old donor.

When she was examined nine months after her liver failed and the new organ was transplanted, doctors were able to discontinue the immuno-suppression medication because it wasn't needed.

Despite Brennan not taking anti-rejection drugs for four years, her liver functions are normal, and she has no symptoms of the immune cells of the donated liver attacking those of their host.

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