NEW ZEALAND: Infant Receives Life-Saving Liver Transplant For Biliary Atresia After Five-Day Match

Infant’s Rapid liver transplant After Biliary Atresia Leads To Remarkable Recovery

WORLD NEWS – NEW ZEALAND: A baby named Sophie born near the end of 2022 required an urgent liver transplant after developing jaundice and failing to feed in her first days of life. A midwife’s referral led to hospital testing and ultimately a liver biopsy that diagnosed biliary atresia, a rare condition in which bile ducts are blocked and cannot drain the liver. An initial corrective operation did not succeed, leaving transplantation as the only viable option for survival.

Because Sophie was only six months old, finding a suitably small and healthy donor in a country the size of New Zealand presented a daunting challenge. She was added to the transplant waiting list on a Friday, and within five days the family was informed that a perfect-sized match had been located. The surgical team scheduled her for the operating theatre early the following morning at 8 a.m., launching a rapid chain of preparation and care.

The operation and recovery proceeded without unexpected complications, according to the family. Sophie was described as an exemplary transplant patient; following major abdominal surgery she returned home and began crawling two months later, then reached walking milestones by 13 months. She has since become active and attends preschool, with her parents noting that her present health belies the severity of what she experienced as an infant.

The family expresses profound gratitude to the donor family and to Faro for their role in making the transplant possible, calling the decision to donate amid personal bereavement heroic and selfless. They emphasize that organ donation can literally be the difference between life and death for a six-month-old child like Sophie, and they thank everyone who has chosen to be a donor for enabling a second chance at life.


Transplant News
Transplant News

Transplant News brings you the news and content that matters to the transplant community. From patient stories, to the latest in transplant innovation, Transplant News is your window into the world of transplantation.