Implanted Trachea Going Strong

Five years after receiving a tissue-engineered airway, the 30-year-old Colombian patient is doing well, having experienced no immunological complications associated with the procedure.

Written byJef Akst
| 1 min read

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STOCK.XCHNG, JYNMEYERFive years ago, Claudia Castillo got a new trachea—a de-celled donor scaffold seeded with cartilage cells grown from her own stem cells and with epithelial cells from a healthy part of her windpipe. Today, the Colombian mother of two “continues to enjoy a good quality of life, and has not experienced any immunological complications or rejection of the implanted airway,” according to The Lancet.

After Castillo’s own trachea had partially collapsed following complications from tuberculosis, Paolo Macchiarini at the Hospital Clínic of Barcelona in Spain and colleagues decided she needed a new one. Castillo was released 10 days after surgery, needing no immunosuppressive drugs. She did require the implantation of a stent to support a part of the airway that began to narrow as a result of scarring, but now, five years later, her doctors report that she shows good lung function, has experienced no immunological complications, and continues to engage in a normal social and working life.

“These results confirm what we—and many patients—hoped at the time of the original operation: that tissue engineered transplants are safe and effective in the long term,” Macchiarini, now at the Karolinska ...

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  • Jef (an unusual nickname for Jennifer) got her master’s degree from Indiana University in April 2009 studying the mating behavior of seahorses. After four years of diving off the Gulf Coast of Tampa and performing behavioral experiments at the Tennessee Aquarium in Chattanooga, she left research to pursue a career in science writing. As The Scientist's managing editor, Jef edited features and oversaw the production of the TS Digest and quarterly print magazine. In 2022, her feature on uterus transplantation earned first place in the trade category of the Awards for Excellence in Health Care Journalism. She is a member of the National Association of Science Writers.

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