EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 22 Aditi, eight, with Professor Stephen Marks, Children's Kidney Specialist and Kidney Transplant Professor during an appointment at Great Ormond Street Hospital, London. Aditi is the first child in the UK and on the NHS to be taken off immunosuppressants just one-month after kidney transplant at the hospital. Picture date: Tuesday September 19, 2023. PA Photo. This is possible because Aditi had an immune condition for which she received her mother's bone marrow six months before receiving a kidney transplant for severe irreversible kidney failure. This reprogrammed her immune system to be the same as her donor kidney, so her organ would not attack Aditi's body. See PA story HEALTH Transplant. Photo credit should read: Aaron Chown/PA Wire
EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 22 Aditi, eight, with Professor Stephen Marks, Children's Kidney Specialist and Kidney Transplant Professor during an appointment at Great Ormond Street Hospital, London. Aditi is the first child in the UK and on the NHS to be taken off immunosuppressants just one-month after kidney transplant at the hospital. Picture date: Tuesday September 19, 2023. PA Photo. This is possible because Aditi had an immune condition for which she received her mother's bone marrow six months before receiving a kidney transplant for severe irreversible kidney failure. This reprogrammed her immune system to be the same as her donor kidney, so her organ would not attack Aditi's body. See PA story HEALTH Transplant. Photo credit should read: Aaron Chown/PA Wire
EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 22 Aditi, eight, with Professor Stephen Marks, Children's Kidney Specialist and Kidney Transplant Professor during an appointment at Great Ormond Street Hospital, London. Aditi is the first child in the UK and on the NHS to be taken off immunosuppressants just one-month after kidney transplant at the hospital. Picture date: Tuesday September 19, 2023. PA Photo. This is possible because Aditi had an immune condition for which she received her mother's bone marrow six months before receiving a kidney transplant for severe irreversible kidney failure. This reprogrammed her immune system to be the same as her donor kidney, so her organ would not attack Aditi's body. See PA story HEALTH Transplant. Photo credit should read: Aaron Chown/PA Wire
EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 22 Aditi, eight, with Professor Stephen Marks, Children's Kidney Specialist and Kidney Transplant Professor during an appointment at Great Ormond Street Hospital, Lo

London girl is first in UK to have kidney transplant without need for lifelong drugs


  • English
  • Arabic

An eight-year-old girl has been spared from taking drugs for life to stop her body rejecting a kidney transplant, thanks to a UK-first treatment.

Aditi Shankar’s immune system was “reprogrammed” after a stem cell transplant so that her body accepted a donor kidney as its own.

Clinicians at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London have explained the pioneering treatment that has given Aditi an “excellent quality of life”.

Because her bone marrow transplant and kidney came from the same donor – her mother – the new organ is working without the need for anti-rejection drugs.

While providing a vital function after transplant surgery, immunosuppressants work by dampening down the body’s immune system, meaning anyone taking them is at higher risk of an infection, among other complications.

The drugs usually need to be taken for life but Aditi stopped taking them a month after her surgery thanks to the pioneering work of Great Ormond Street doctors.

Aditi's mother Divya Shankar said: “I was so happy to give her blood cells and a kidney.”

The 38-year-old shopkeeper added: “I just feel so proud.”

Her child is now able to swim, sing, dance and play on her trampoline.

Just last year she was spending a significant proportion of her time in and out of hospital for dialysis – a procedure that removes waste products and excess fluid from blood when the kidneys have stopped working properly.

When Aditi was first referred to Great Ormond Street at the age of five, doctors discovered she had a rare genetic condition called Schimke’s immuno-osseous dysplasia, which affects the immune system and kidneys.

Aditi first in UK to have kidney transplant without need for lifelong drugs - in pictures

For every three million children in the UK, doctors are likely to only find one case.

Dialysis, the first treatment on offer, meant the family had to travel from their home in Greenford, north-west London, to the city-centre hospital three times a week.

In March 2021 Aditi's kidney function dropped drastically but an organ transplant was not possible while her immune system was so weak.

So the hospital's renal, immunology and stem cell transplant teams worked with international colleagues to come up with a treatment plan.

Aditi spent four weeks in the intensive care unit having her bone marrow transplant while undergoing dialysis for 24 hours a day.

Six months later, in March 2023, she was well enough for a kidney transplant.

“My mum gave me my new blood cells,” Aditi said. “I got the kidney transplant when I went to special sleep and closed my eyes. Now I can go swimming.”

Aditi’s favourite school subject is science and she has a keen interest in biology after learning so much about the human body during her time in hospital.

Her father Uday Shankar, a 48-year-old chef, praised his daughter for maintaining a positive attitude throughout.

“Most of the support for the family has come from Aditi,” he said. “She was going in for six to eight hours a day of dialysis and then she would come home and still light the whole house up.”

Prof Stephen Marks, children’s kidney specialist at Great Ormond Street, said he has worked at the hospital for over 25 years and had never seen a case like Aditi's.

He said she is “the first patient in the United Kingdom who has had a kidney transplant to not require immunosuppressive medication after the surgery”.

Prof Marks added that due to her underlying condition Aditi would not normally be able to receive a kidney transplant.

“Her immune deficiency had to be corrected by having mum’s bone marrow first, and because Aditi was able to accept her mum’s bone marrow, that therefore meant her body could then see her mum’s kidney as being part of her,” he said.

“A month after the transplant, we were able to take her off all of her immunosuppression, which means she doesn’t get the side effects of the drugs.”

He welcomed the patient's progress and said she is now enjoying an “excellent quality of life, when in March 2021 we were in a situation of discussing what the future [was] going to hold”.

“It is exciting for Aditi to be the first patient in the United Kingdom, the first patient under the National Health Service to have had a kidney transplant for this condition and to be off immunosuppression within a month,” he said.

Asked about the potential use of the double procedure for other patients, the doctor said: “Everything in life, especially in medicine, is about the risks-and-benefit ratio.

“Undergoing this double transplant, with a bone marrow transplant then followed by a kidney transplant six months later, has a much higher risk of causing injury to the patient and also death, so we always have to balance each individual case.”

Prof Marks will present details of the case to the European Society for Paediatric Nephrology conference next week. An editorial on the findings is also due to be published in the journal Paediatric Transplantation.

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

Read part four: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE

 

The biog

Mission to Seafarers is one of the largest port-based welfare operators in the world.

It provided services to around 200 ports across 50 countries.

They also provide port chaplains to help them deliver professional welfare services.

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
The years Ramadan fell in May

1987

1954

1921

1888

The specs: 2018 Kia Picanto

Price: From Dh39,500

Engine: 1.2L inline four-cylinder

Transmission: Four-speed auto

Power: 86hp @ 6,000rpm

Torque: 122Nm @ 4,000rpm

Fuel economy, combined: 6.0L / 100km

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE.

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part two: how climate change drove the race for an alternative 

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE

GAC GS8 Specs

Engine: 2.0-litre 4cyl turbo

Power: 248hp at 5,200rpm

Torque: 400Nm at 1,750-4,000rpm

Transmission: 8-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 9.1L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh149,900

The years Ramadan fell in May

1987

1954

1921

1888

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting

2. Prayer

3. Hajj

4. Shahada

5. Zakat 

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting

2. Prayer

3. Hajj

4. Shahada

5. Zakat 

THREE
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Mercedes V250 Avantgarde specs

Engine: 2.0-litre in-line four-cylinder turbo

Gearbox: 7-speed automatic

Power: 211hp at 5,500rpm

Torque: 350Nm

Fuel economy, combined: 6.0 l/100 km

Price: Dh235,000

EMIRATES'S%20REVISED%20A350%20DEPLOYMENT%20SCHEDULE
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The Voice of Hind Rajab

Starring: Saja Kilani, Clara Khoury, Motaz Malhees

Director: Kaouther Ben Hania

Rating: 4/5

While you're here
RESULTS FOR STAGE 4

Stage 4 Dubai to Hatta, 197 km, Road race.

Overall leader Primoz Roglic SLO (Team Jumbo - Visma)

Stage winners: 1. Caleb Ewan AUS (Lotto - Soudal) 2. Matteo Moschetti ITA (Trek - Segafredo) 3. Primoz Roglic SLO (Team Jumbo - Visma)

The bio

Date of Birth: April 25, 1993
Place of Birth: Dubai, UAE
Marital Status: Single
School: Al Sufouh in Jumeirah, Dubai
University: Emirates Airline National Cadet Programme and Hamdan University
Job Title: Pilot, First Officer
Number of hours flying in a Boeing 777: 1,200
Number of flights: Approximately 300
Hobbies: Exercising
Nicest destination: Milan, New Zealand, Seattle for shopping
Least nice destination: Kabul, but someone has to do it. It’s not scary but at least you can tick the box that you’ve been
Favourite place to visit: Dubai, there’s no place like home

The specs

Engine: 3.9-litre twin-turbo V8

Transmission: seven-speed

Power: 720hp

Torque: 770Nm

Price: Dh1,100,000

On sale: now

Retirement funds heavily invested in equities at a risky time

Pension funds in growing economies in Asia, Latin America and the Middle East have a sharply higher percentage of assets parked in stocks, just at a time when trade tensions threaten to derail markets.

Retirement money managers in 14 geographies now allocate 40 per cent of their assets to equities, an 8 percentage-point climb over the past five years, according to a Mercer survey released last week that canvassed government, corporate and mandatory pension funds with almost $5 trillion in assets under management. That compares with about 25 per cent for pension funds in Europe.

The escalating trade spat between the US and China has heightened fears that stocks are ripe for a downturn. With tensions mounting and outcomes driven more by politics than economics, the S&P 500 Index will be on course for a “full-scale bear market” without Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts, Citigroup’s global macro strategy team said earlier this week.

The increased allocation to equities by growth-market pension funds has come at the expense of fixed-income investments, which declined 11 percentage points over the five years, according to the survey.

Hong Kong funds have the highest exposure to equities at 66 per cent, although that’s been relatively stable over the period. Japan’s equity allocation jumped 13 percentage points while South Korea’s increased 8 percentage points.

The money managers are also directing a higher portion of their funds to assets outside of their home countries. On average, foreign stocks now account for 49 per cent of respondents’ equity investments, 4 percentage points higher than five years ago, while foreign fixed-income exposure climbed 7 percentage points to 23 per cent. Funds in Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and Taiwan are among those seeking greater diversification in stocks and fixed income.

• Bloomberg

Updated: September 23, 2023, 9:28 AM`