Transplant Care

Rare Kidney-Liver Paired Exchange Performed at Keck Medicine of USC

Originally published September 10, 2024

Last updated September 11, 2024

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Keck Medicine of USC transplant experts helped one set of siblings save another.

A rare living-donor transplant exchange performed by the experts of Keck Medicine of USC allowed one set of siblings to save the other.

One patient, 28 years old, was born with biliary atresia. Her 21-year-old brother offered to donate part of his liver, but their organs were incompatible.

The other patient, 39 years old, had failing kidneys. Although his 28-year-old sister volunteered as a donor, she wasn’t a match for him.

The two families had never met, but after both were referred to Keck Medicine of USC for treatment, tests revealed a paired exchange was possible.

As a pioneer in living-liver donation, and with a robust living-donor kidney transplant program, the USC Transplant Institute, part of Keck Medicine of USC, was uniquely qualified to perform such a complex living-donor exchange.

Achieving the unique kidney-liver paired exchange involved tight collaboration between many experts of the USC Transplant Institute. Specialists from the USC Kidney Transplant Program and the USC Liver Transplant and Comprehensive Liver Disease Care Center explain how the strategy evolved.

An uncommon exchange

Navpreet Kaur, MD, surgical director for the USC Living-Donor Liver Program at the USC Transplant Institute, was the one who determined in July 2023 that an exchange between the two sets of siblings could be done.

Navpreet Kaur, MD

She explains that finding candidates for paired exchanges involves close coordination between the kidney and liver transplant teams.

“We have to think about patient anatomy and the size of the organ, because if you choose an organ from a larger donor and try to put it in a smaller person, you’ll run into problems,” Kaur explains.

Jim Kim, MD, director of kidney and pancreas transplantation at Keck Medicine of USC, says that while paired-exchange kidney transplants are becoming more common, paired liver exchanges are exceedingly rare — let alone paired donation between different organs. “It’s rare to find two people who are both willing and able to donate a different organ than they originally intended,” Kim says. 

“We had the idea of developing a swap like this for quite some time,” recalls Aaron Ahearn, MD, associate director of the USC Liver Transplant and Comprehensive Liver Disease Care Center who focused on the liver recipient.

Jim Kim, MD

“In this case,” Kaur says, “a female-to-female liver transplant and a male-to-male kidney transplant was a perfect fit. Since the donors already had workups completed, we were able to match them quickly.”

The challenge of making a match

Organ transplants are complex, even when the transplant involves the same type of organ. When different types of organs are involved, the difficulties increase.

“Finding an immunologically compatible donor can prove to be challenging in living-donor kidney transplants,” Kim says. “Finding a liver donor with normal kidney anatomy and who was also simultaneously the right immunologic match was truly remarkable.”

Aaron Ahearn, MD

On the liver transplant side, “Finding the right combination of blood type and anatomy was tricky, especially since living-liver donor surgeries are still limited,” Ahearn adds. “Keck Medicine has one of the top five programs in the nation for it, but even we perform only about 30 of these surgeries per year. So, in this case, it was like the stars aligned.”

Ahearn says the coordination teams deserve special credit for guiding the four patients through the process. “Especially for the donors, they’ve already made the massive sacrifice of volunteering to give up part of their body to help their sibling, but then they’re asked if they’d be willing to undergo a completely different surgery. It’s complex mental gymnastics,” he says. “It’s a testament to the emotional support our care teams provide for the patients to make sure they understand everything and feel good about it.”

Kidney and liver transplant surgery

The surgeries were set for August 31, 2023, at Keck Hospital of USC.

Hamid Shidban, MD

In addition to Kim and Ahearn, the surgical team included transplant surgeon Hamid Shidban, MD, who operated on the kidney recipient. Kaur and transplant surgeon Yuri Genyk, MD, focused on the liver donor.

The procedures were coordinated on a precise schedule, with four operating rooms running simultaneously. According to Kaur, the experience of the USC Transplant Institute’s support teams in managing multiple daily surgeries proved beneficial.

“We have been doing living donor–related transplantation for 25 years,” Kaur says. “Our operating rooms understand our needs, and they are very good at accommodating several patients at once.”

The exchange also required immense trust between the four surgical teams. “This is the upper level of complexity,” Ahearn says. “When you have an exchange like this, all four surgeries have to go off without a hitch to be successful. It reflects the resiliency and strength of our program that we were able to make it all line up.”

Yuri Genyk, MD

“It was a total team effort,” Kim says. “From our transplant coordinators and nurses to our anesthesia colleagues caring for these four individuals before, during and after surgery, this case showcases the best that Keck Medicine has to offer.”

Sweeping success

Ultimately, all four surgeries were a success. Their doctors say all four patients can expect to live healthy lives. “They’re all young people,” Kaur says. “I’m glad they can all move on and start a new chapter.”

“There are far more people in need of organ transplants than there are available organs,” Kim says. “Living donation helps bridge the gap, and this type of bi-organ paired exchange can open up even more opportunities for those in need.”

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Erin Laviola
Erin Laviola is a freelance writer for Keck Medicine of USC.

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