ESOT Congress Daily Recap

Monday 30 June 2025

Opening Session Recap: A Changing Climate – Challenges for Society, Healthcare Systems, and Transplantation

The ESOT Congress 2025 kicked-off yesterday with a powerful and thought-provoking session addressing one of the most urgent issues of our time: the intersection between climate change and healthcare, with a special focus on transplantation. Congress Chairs Olivier Thaunat and Colin Wilson welcomed delegates and set the tone for both the session and event, which is dedicated to exploring and nurturing a sustainable transplantation journey.

“It’s a real honour to welcome you to this meeting, which focuses on a theme that touches all of our working lives,” said Colin Wilson. The urgency and scale of the challenge ahead were brought into focus and underscored, perhaps symbolically, by the current heatwave across much of the European continent.

A recorded keynote message by climate expert Jean-Marc Jancovici delivered a historical and scientific overview of climate change. He illustrated how it is far from a new issue, sharing archival newspaper clippings from over a century ago and research from the 19th century that discussed changes in our atmosphere.

“If we stopped all emissions tomorrow, the CO₂ already in the atmosphere would still be affecting our climate for centuries,” he explained. “Even after 1,000 years, a quarter of our CO₂ surplus would remain”, noting the harsh reality that the planet’s future climate will never return to pre-industrial conditions. To contextualise the gravity of recent temperature increases, Jancovici pointed out that the last Ice Age was only 4°C cooler than pre-industrial temperatures, making current changes abrupt and extreme in geological terms.

He warned of wide-ranging impacts, from increased incidence of diseases such as Lyme disease and malaria to food insecurity, rising sea levels, more intense hurricanes, and potential social unrest – all of which could significantly lower global life expectancy. Jancovici also highlighted the role healthcare systems play, being significant contributors to emissions through areas such as medical device manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, and waste.

Climate Change and Health Systems: The European Outlook

Aleksandra Kazmierczak of the European Environment Agency (EEA) followed with a regional perspective in her talk, “Climate-related Health Risks and Impact on Health Systems.”

She stressed that “Europe is the fastest-warming continent,” noting alarming trends including escalating heatwaves, widespread flooding, and persistent water scarcity – which now affects 34% of Europeans annually. She projected that by the 2080s, structural damage to healthcare infrastructure from extreme weather events could cost up to €520 million each year. Furthermore, more than half of all infectious diseases are now believed to be influenced or exacerbated by climate change.

Kazmierczak pointed to emerging solutions, including preventative strategies and a growing emphasis on climate change education in healthcare. Encouragingly, more than 80% of public health schools in Europe now include climate-related content in their curricula. “Doctors and nurses can be real champions for climate action,” she said, citing research showing healthcare professionals are among the most trusted voices in society.

Environmental Factors and Transplant Outcomes

Maria Luisa Alegre brought the focus to transplantation science in her presentation on the “Impact of Environmental Factors on Alloimmunity and Transplant Fate.” She outlined how variable environmental factors such as diet, pollution, exercise, and gut microbiota can influence transplant outcomes and immune responses.

Drawing on recent mouse model studies (Real et al., 2019; Molinero, 2016; Li et al., 2023), Alegre showed evidence that physical activity improves graft survival, glycaemic control, and cardiac function, while a high-fat diet accelerates rejection and intensifies alloimmune responses.

“The tackling of metabolomic profiles in transplant candidates may enable personalised strategies that preserve diverse microbiota to improve transplant outcomes and reduce post-transplant complications,” she concluded.

Panel Discussion: Call to Action

The session concluded with a panel discussion moderated by Jacqui Thornton, featuring Aleksandra Kazmierczak, Maria Luisa Alegre, Gabriel Oniscu (ESOT President), and Derek Manas (Medical Director, NHS Blood and Transplant). The discussion focused on the actionable steps that the transplantation and wider medical communities can take to address the growing climate-health crisis – from research and policy to public communication and sustainable clinical practices.


Scientific Programme Highlights: New study provides breakthrough in pig-to-human kidney transplantation

A pioneering study, presented today at the ESOT Congress, has provided unprecedented insights into the immune response following pig-to-human kidney xenotransplantation. The findings mark a significant step forward in overcoming the biggest challenge in xenotransplantation: rejection by the human immune system.

Using cutting-edge spatial molecular imaging, the international research team (Paris Institute for Transplantation and Organ Regeneration & NYU Langone Transplant Institute) mapped how human immune cells interact with pig kidney tissue in transplanted organs, revealing critical early markers of rejection and potential intervention strategies.

Human immune cells were found in every part of the pig kidney's filtering system after the transplant. The researchers observed early molecular signs of antibody-mediated rejection as soon as Day 10 and peaking at Day 33, reinforcing previous findings that rejection begins rapidly but progresses over time. By tracking these immune responses for up to 61 days, the team identified a crucial window for targeted therapeutic intervention.

The study’s innovative approach used a bioinformatic pipeline to distinguish human immune cells from pig structural cells, allowing for precise mapping of immune infiltration patterns. Notably, macrophages and myeloid cells were the most prevalent immune cell types across all time points, further confirming their role as key mediators in xenograft rejection. When targeted therapeutic interventions were introduced, immune-mediated signs of rejection were successfully weakened. Combined with novel spatial insights into how immune cells interact with pig kidney tissue, this marks a major breakthrough — paving the way for more refined anti-rejection strategies. These advances come at a pivotal time as the first US-based clinical trials of pig kidney transplantation into living human recipients begin in 2025.

“Our study provides the most detailed molecular map to date of how the human immune system engages with a transplanted pig kidney,” explained Dr. Goutaudier. “By pinpointing specific immune cell behaviours and gene expressions, we can refine anti-rejection treatments and improve transplant viability.”

With xenotransplantation poised to address the global organ shortage crisis, these findings bring researchers one step closer to making genetically modified pig kidneys a viable long-term solution.

Read the press release


Stronger Together PRO Award

The Stronger Together PRO Award carries recognition to single transplant centres, units, institutions or hospitals.

The centre, unit, institution or hospital must submit a group of abstracts (a minimum of 5) and achieve the best average score amongst all groups of abstracts.

The winners of this year’s award were IKEM, Prague, Czech Republic, who received a prize of €5,000 following the Opening Session. Medizinische Universität Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria, received the runners up award, and were presented a prize of €1,000.

Congratulations to both institutions!


Scientific Programme Highlights: Deceased-donor-initiated chains sustain kidney paired donation in Italy

Leonardo Da Vinci Award Nominee: Cristina Silvestre

The pioneering DEC-K (DECeased-donor initiated Kidney exchange) programme leverages deceased donors to trigger transplant chains involving immunologically incompatible living-donor pairs. From March 2018 to December 2024, 30 chains were launched across 15 transplant centres, resulting in 79 transplants; 52 from living donors and 27 from deceased donors were returned to the regional transplant waiting list of the initiating donor’s region, preserving geographic fairness at chain conclusion.

Most chains involved two to three donor–recipient dyads and were prompted by ABO (blood type) incompatibility (n=25), HLA (immune system) sensitisation (n=19), or both (n=6). Chains had an average duration of 98.5 days, reflecting the coordination needed to complete multi-centre exchanges. Despite this complexity, the programme maintained a high completion rate.

Notably, 93.6% of chains completed successfully. Reasons for early termination in three cases included clinical or psychological issues. Importantly, no serious complications occurred in living donors, and only four graft losses were recorded: two vascular thromboses, one rejection, and one primary non-function.

At 6-months post-transplant, serum creatinine levels were comparable between living and deceased donor recipients (1.3 vs. 1.4 mg/dL; p=0.24), and one-year patient survival reached 98.7%.

This study confirms the feasibility and impact of deceased-donor-initiated chains in expanding transplant access and supporting equity-driven organ allocation, particularly in settings where altruistic, non-directed donors are scarce.


Scientific Programme Highlights: Pre-donation cardiac arrest is associated with modest graft survival benefit in liver transplantation

Leonardo Da Vinci Award Nominee: Dharesh Raj Amarnath

Analysis of the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) registry suggests that livers from donors with pre-donation cardiac arrest may confer a modest survival advantage, supporting their safe use in clinical liver transplantation.

Ischemic preconditioning through pre-donation cardiac arrest (PDCA) may render donor livers more resilient to ischemia-reperfusion injury. Analysing 74,592 adult liver transplant procedures from the UNOS registry (2010–2023), investigators identified PDCA in 43.7% of donors. After adjusting for donor and recipient factors, PDCA was associated with modestly improved graft survival (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.914; 95% CI, 0.851–0.982; p=0.012), with greater benefit observed in donation after circulatory death (DCD) donors and those with elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT).

The effect was more evident in specific donor subgroups, with survival benefits concentrated among DCD donors, those with moderately elevated ALT, shorter admission-to-donation intervals, and older donor age. A dose–response trend also emerged: each doubling of PDCA duration conferred additional graft survival benefit (aHR 0.953; 95% CI, 0.917–0.991; p=0.018).

No increase in early allograft dysfunction was observed, and similar associations were seen across secondary outcomes, reinforcing the robustness of the findings.

These results represent the largest real-world demonstration of ischemic preconditioning in liver transplantation and support the inclusion of PDCA livers in clinical practice, potentially expanding the donor pool by reducing unnecessary discards.


Scientific Programme Highlights: Ex vivo hypothermic perfusion preserves paediatric hearts for up to 8 hours

Leonardo Da Vinci Award Nominee: Kristina Andrijauskaite

A novel portable device demonstrated safe, effective preservation of paediatric-sized donor hearts with strong myocardial function and transplant success in preclinical models.

The VP.S ENCORE® PEDSTM device represents a critical innovation in paediatric donor heart preservation, employing a bespoke hypothermic perfusion system tailored to meet the metabolic needs of small hearts. In this preclinical study, six porcine hearts approximating infant and child size were perfused at 7.8 ± 1.5 °C under a controlled pressure of 11 ± 1.4 mmHg, achieving mean flow rates of 22 ± 14 mL/min for up to 8 hours. No edema was observed during preservation.

Metabolic assessment revealed low lactate levels (<3 mmol/L) throughout perfusion, consistent with sustained aerobic metabolism and limited ischemic injury. Endothelial integrity assays confirmed preservation of the vascular lining, while Langendorff reperfusion testing showed strong left ventricular contractility (dP/dT >2,000 mmHg/s), indicating preserved myocardial function.

Two heterotopic transplants of preserved hearts were successfully completed in matched porcine recipients, showing 100% survival, normal metabolic profiles, and stable cardiac activity at the time of implantation. Behavioral assessments in recipient animals were within normal range through postoperative day 7, with no signs of rejection.

By safely extending preservation time beyond the 4–6 hour limit of cold storage, this device could transform transplant logistics, expanding access across wider geographic regions and reducing time pressures during surgical coordination. Future studies will assess long-term outcomes, immunologic responses, and support translation to clinical trials in paediatric patients.


Scientific Programme Highlights: T-cell regulatory loss precedes emergence of de novo donor-specific antibodies

Leonardo Da Vinci Award Nominee: Sumoyee Basu

A new study reveals that dysregulated alloreactive T-cell responses can be detected months before the emergence of de novo donor-specific antibodies (dnDSA) in kidney transplant recipients.

To explore early immune events leading to dnDSA, researchers conducted longitudinal analyses on peripheral blood samples from 52 initially DSA-negative patients in the OuTSMART trial. Using FluoroSpot assays, they measured IFN-γ and IL-17 production from CD4⁺ T cells following stimulation with donor and control HLA proteins, with and without depletion of regulatory cell subsets (CD19⁺ B cells and CD25^hi Tregs).

Antigen-specific IFN-γ responses (ASR) were detectable in 67.9% of assays (95/140), including in samples collected up to 32 months before dnDSA onset. From 4-months prior to dnDSA detection, unregulated IFN-γ responses to donor antigens became more prevalent, while control responses remained predominantly regulated. Furthermore, 28% of DSA samples (n=74) had unregulated IFN-γ responses, compared with 21% of controls (n=66), while regulated responses were twice as frequent in controls. No similar trend was observed for IL-17. Flow cytometry profiling suggested changes in regulatory immune subsets during this pre-sensitisation window.

These findings offer the first clinical systematic evidence of a quantifiable immune shift preceding dnDSA, identifying a potential window for early risk stratification and immune intervention to preserve long-term graft function.


Thank you to our partners

ESOT would like to thank its partners for supporting the ESOT Congress and for working together to improve outcomes for patients with terminal organ disease by means of transplantation, organ regeneration and substitution.

View our ESOT Congress 2025 partners

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