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Practical Guidelines
19.
Bearing in mind all that has been said above, we can now
present a practical approach which will guide the path of research and
development in the area of xenotransplantation as applied to man.
Regarding the
xenotransplantation of solid organs, it is of course necessary that
pre-clinical experiments (from animal to animal) should continue for as long as
scientists should require and until repeatable positive results are obtained,
results which are considered sufficient to allow trials on man to begin.
When the moment arrives,
it will be ethically correct, respecting the rules of informed consent
indicated above, to involve initially only a restricted group of patients,
patients who cannot be chosen - in the given circumstances - for
allotransplantation (whether because of waiting lists or individual counter-indications),
and for whom no better alternative treatment is available.
A commensurate moral
imperative is that of ensuring careful and detailed monitoring of the
individuals who receive a xenograft, a situation which could foreseeably
continue for the rest of the patient's life, watching for any sign of possible
infection caused by known and unknown pathogenic agents.
In addition, every
experimental clinical trial should be carried out in highly specialised centres
with proven experience in pre-clinical pig-to-primate models; these centres
should be authorised and supervised by the competent health care authorities.
The results thus
obtained, if unequivocally positive, would constitute the basis for extending
the practice of xenotransplantation, making it an accepted surgical therapy.
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