The work
is funded by the US Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine,
which hopes to use the technology to help soldiers with battlefield
injuries.
Professor Anthony Atala, director of the institute, told the
Observer the
target
is to get the organs into patients with injuries or congenital
abnormalities. The penises would be grown using a patient's own cells to
avoid the risk of immunological rejection after organ transplantation.
Atala
previously led a successful project engineering penises for rabbits in
2008. The previous work on rabbits showed that once the tissue was there
the body recognises it as its own.
"The rabbit studies were very
encouraging," he said, "but to get approval for humans we need all the
safety and quality assurance data, we need to show that the materials
aren't toxic, and we have to spell out the manufacturing process, step
by step.”
Atala told
Reuters that, as a paediatric
urologist, the inspiration for his work was seeing babies born with
deficient genitalia, and there being “no good options." Penis
transplants from human donors have proved controversial in the past,
with the first successful transplant having to be removed two weeks
later. The surgery was carried out in 2005 in China, yet had to be
reversed because of the psychological problems experienced by the then
44-year-old man and his wife.
The surgeon, Dr Hu Weiile wrote in a
report afterwards: "because of a severe psychological problem of the
recipient and his wife, the transplanted penis regretfully had to be cut
off." Penis transplant surgery is not common, and while it is not much
more complex than other transplants, doctors question whether
transplants can make the organ fully functional.
The Wake Forest
Institute is currently working on 30 different types of tissues and
organs and has been successful at developing lab grown organs in the
past - the institute orchestrated the first human bladder transplant in
1992, the first urethra in 2004 and the first vagina in 2005.
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