Transplant specialists at Harefield, Guy’s and King’s College hospitals have collaborated on a new process that will make more donor hearts and other organs available for transplantation each year.
The new process enables organs infected with hepatitis C to be safely transplanted into a recipient. As a result, a patient at Harefield Hospital is the first person in London – and at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust – to receive a heart transplant from a hepatitis C positive donor.
The collaboration between cardiothoracic specialists at Harefield, nephrology specialists at Guy’s and hepatology specialists at King’s – all part of the King’s Health Partnership – means people waiting for a heart, lung, liver or kidney transplant may now have access to more donor organs.
Hepatitis C is a bloodborne virus that can severely damage the liver if untreated. Until recently, most organs from hepatitis C positive donors were discarded due to the high risk of transmission and limited treatment options. But with modern antiviral therapies now able to cure hepatitis C, these organs can be used safely.
Recent data suggests using hepatitis C positive organs could lead to up to 75 additional organ transplants in the UK each year.


Heart transplant patient Mark Bromage, 64, a former insurance executive, was the first recipient of a hepatitis C positive heart in London, and only the fourth in England.
Dr Andrew Morley-Smith, transplant cardiologist at Harefield Hospital, said: “Thanks to the collaboration between our hospitals, our transplant and surgical teams were equipped to manage every eventuality with Mark’s transplant. We were able to provide him with information and reassurance from the start. And if he had become infected with hepatitis C, we had quick access to the medication and specialist consultants at King’s who would support us to treat it immediately