Thursday, March 13, 2025 - An Australian man lived for 100 days with an artificial titanium heart while he awaited a donor transplant, the longest period to date of someone who used the technology.
The patient, a man in his 40s who declined to be identified, received
the implant during surgery at St. Vincent’s Hospital Sydney last November.
In February, he became the first person worldwide to leave hospital with
the device, which kept him alive until a heart donor became available earlier
this month.
According to a statement issued Wednesday, March 12, by St Vincent’s
Hospital, Monash University and BiVACOR, the US-Australian company behind the
device, the man, who had severe heart failure, was “recovering well.”
The ability of the device to sustain him for so long is being celebrated
as a sign the artificial heart could potentially offer a long-term option for
people suffering heart failure. The device is still under trial . and has not
yet been approved for general use.
BiVACOR’s founder, Australian bioengineer Daniel Timms, who invented the
device following his father’s death from heart disease, said it was
“exhilarating to see decades of work come to fruition.”
“The entire BiVACOR team is deeply grateful to the patient and his
family for placing their trust in our Total Artificial Heart,” he said in the
statement. “Their bravery will pave the way for countless more patients to
receive this lifesaving technology.”
The BiVACOR Total Artificial Heart (TAH) has a single moving part, a
levitated rotor that’s held in place by magnets. As the name suggests, it’s
constructed from titanium and there are no valves or mechanical bearings that
may be susceptible to wear.
It pumps blood to the body and the lungs, replacing both ventricles of a
failing heart.
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death globally killing
around 18 million people each year, according to the World Health Organization.
The long-term ambition is to use the device to save more people who
languish on waiting lists for suitable donors. According to the US Health
Department, about 3,500 people received heart transplants in 2024. Around 4,400
joined the waiting list the same year.
Professor Chris Hayward, from the Victor Chang Cardiac Research
Institute, said the BiVACOR heart ushered in “a whole new ball game for heart
transplants.”
“Within the next decade we will see the artificial heart becoming the
alternative for patients who are unable to wait for a donor heart or when a
donor heart is simply not available,” said Hayward, who is overseeing the
Australian patient’s recovery and was involved in preparing the device for
clinical trials.
The device has already been tested in the Food and Drug Administration’s
Early Feasibility Study in the United States, which saw five patients
successfully implanted with the device.
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