Tiny Babies Receive
Domino Heart Transplant
Hospital: Procedure Is
Historic Because Patients Are Youngest Ever
Feb. 2, 2006 — Two
babies made medical history earlier this month after
they successfully underwent an extremely rare
procedure known as domino heart transplant surgery,
according to Columbus Children's Hospital in Ohio.
Five-month-old Jason Wolfe, born with primary
pulmonary hypertension, needed a new set of lungs.
Because of his condition, his doctors knew a lung
transplant would work better if he also received a
new heart at the same time.
And that meant that his heart, which was otherwise
healthy, could be donated to another baby — and
that's precisely what was done on Jan. 14 during a
12-hour surgery in which Jason received a new heart
and lungs from a deceased donor, and Jason's heart
was transplanted into Kayla Richardson, a
three-month-old baby born with a single ventricle in
her heart.
According to the hospital, the procedure was
historic because it was the first time domino heart
transplant surgery had been performed on patients so
young anywhere in the world, making Jason the
youngest living heart donor and Kayla the youngest
recipient.
There have only been 12 infant heart-lung
transplants performed in the United States, because
timing and tissue matching can be tricky.
"It really is a quite rare event because everything
has to fall into place," said Dr. Tim Hoffman,
director of the heart transplant program at the
hospital.
Saving Two Lives at Once
Though rarely performed, this type of procedure
helps save two lives at one time.
"Without the use of this domino transplant, most
likely Kayla wouldn't have had the opportunity to
get a transplant and most likely would not have
survived," said Dr. Todd Astor, medical director of
the lung and heart-lung transplant program at the
hospital.
So far, everything seems OK with the babies. The
rarity of the procedure makes their long-term
prognosis hard to predict.
"At this point, we're just so excited that he even
has a future, that whatever future he has we'll just
cherish every day," said Mike Wolfe, Jason's father.
No matter what happens now, the two families feel
inextricably linked as well.
"I'm close to Kayla because she's my daughter. But I
also feel close to Jason because it feels like we're
connected now," said Rebecca Lovins, Kayla's mother.