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Boy’s double hand transplant is declared a success, 18 months after world-first childhood surgery

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Undated handout photo obtained July 18, 2017 shows Zion Harvey, the first child in the world to undergo a double hand transplant in July 2015. Harvey is now able to write, feed and dress himself, doctors said July 18, 2017. Photo: AFP/Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Agence France-Presse

The first child in the world to undergo a double hand transplant is now able to write, feed and dress himself, doctors said Tuesday, declaring the ground-breaking operation a success after 18 months.

The report in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health provides the first official medical update on 10-year old Zion Harvey, who underwent surgery to replace both hands in July 2015.

“Eighteen months after the surgery, the child is more independent and able to complete day-to-day activities,” said Sandra Amaral, a doctor at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, where the operation took place.

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“He continues to improve as he undergoes daily therapy to increase his hand function, and psychosocial support to help deal with the ongoing demands of his surgery.”

Harvey had his hands and feet amputated at the age of two, following a sepsis infection. He also had a kidney transplant.
A 2015 file photo provided by the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania shows a nurse checking the newly transplanted hands of eight-year-old Zion Harvey of Baltimore. Photo: AFP
A 2015 file photo provided by the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania shows a nurse checking the newly transplanted hands of eight-year-old Zion Harvey of Baltimore. Photo: AFP
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Harvey was already receiving drugs to suppress any immune reaction to his kidney, which was a key factor in his selection for the 10-plus hour hand transplant surgery.

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