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Health

'Repaired' kidneys could ease organ shortage

By Rachel Nowak

26 March 2008

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

IT IS a grim dilemma: spend years more on a kidney transplant waiting list, and possibly die before you ever reach the top, or accept a diseased organ that has been patched up.

With the wait for healthy kidneys standing at two to six years in the US and Australia, and 16 years in Japan, two surgeons have been quietly transplanting diseased kidneys from living donors, who have had a kidney removed because of a small cancer or some other disorder. The organs are first repaired, for example, by removing the cancer, before being transplanted into someone with kidney failure.…

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