Drug discovery may boost liver transplant success

21 Dec 22

An existing drug could protect donor livers from damage during the transplantation process and reduce complications that occur afterwards, a new CRM study suggests.

The drugs, called a senolytics, have been developed to target a key mechanism related to cancer and heart conditions, but in studies with mice researchers discovered it can also prevent the deterioration of a vital part of the liver during storage and transplantation.

The senolytic drugs were found to protect the liver’s biliary tract, which drains waste from the liver. Failure of the biliary tract can cause a transplant to fail, resulting in the need for a new liver in nearly a quarter of these cases.

Liver preservation 

Liver transplants are currently the only curative option for patients with end-stage liver disease. More than 6,000 people a year receive a liver transplant in Europe with 600 of those in the UK.

Traditionally livers are kept in cold storage at 4 degrees Celsius prior to transplantation.

Previous studies have shown that there is a deterioration in the biliary tract in the time between the liver being removed from the donor and transplanted into the recipient, but the reason for this has not been understood.

To study the biological effects of liver preservation before transplantation, researchers used mouse models to mimic the procurement of livers, cold storage and transport.

Biliary tract

The team found that during organ preservation, liver cells called cholangiocytes, which maintain the function of the biliary tract, were most susceptible to senescence, an irreversible sleeping state that causes the cells to stop growing.  Cold storage made senescence worse, leading to less regeneration of this type of cell after transplant.

When scientists gave the senolytic drugs, which block senescence, to mice prior to the liver removal procedure the biliary tract was persevered.

When the drug was tested in the laboratory on human livers not suitable for transplant the structure of the biliary tract was maintained.

Human trials

Experts say this suggests the drug treatment could reduce the risk of transplant failure due to biliary tract damage. They caution, however, that the safety and efficacy of the drug still needs to be tested in human clinical trials.

The team also discovered that despite being prone to cell death during cold storage, hepatocytes - the main type of liver cell involved in metabolism, detoxification and protein production – are able to regenerate as they were not as susceptible to senescence.

The work is published in Science Translational Medicine and was funded by the Medical Research Council and Wellcome.

A collaboration between scientists and surgical liver transplant teams led to this exciting finding. We hope to use this knowledge to help precious donor livers function well after transplant for the benefit of patients with severe liver disease.

Professor Stuart Forbes

Director of University of Edinburgh’s Centre for Regenerative Medicine

As the number of usable livers needed for transplant does not match the number of donors of transplantable livers we need to increase the success rate of liver transplantation, which will improve the quality of life of transplant patients and save on the personal and financial costs associated transplant failure.

Dr Sofia Ferreira

Postdoctoral Research Fellow at University of Edinburgh’s Centre for Regenerative Medicine

Related links

Read article in Science Translational Medicine

Forbes Research Group

University Press Release

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3D computer generated image of liver on blue background showing a network of connections in the liver

[Elena Merkulova via Getty Images]