Jesica Santillan (December 26, 1985 – February 22, 2003) was a Mexican national who died after an organ transplant operation in which she received the heart and lungs of a patient whose blood type did not match hers. The medical error occurred due to a misunderstanding about blood type compatibility between the surgeon at the Duke University Medical Center and the organ transplant agency Carolina Donor Services (CDS) and United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS). The error was identified near the completion of the surgery.

Background

Jesica, two siblings, her mother Magdelena Santillan and her mother's boyfriend Melecio Huerta illegally entered the United States from Tamazula, Mexico, a town west of Mexico City, so that she could receive medical treatment. Relatives have stated that the family paid a coyote to get them across the border. During the journey, thieves stole all of the family's money, including Jesica's earrings.

In January 2002, the patient was listed with the UNOS for a heart transplant. However, subsequent medical evaluations led to an updated listing for a combined heart-lung transplantation in May 2002. Santillan experienced progressive symptoms, including frequent syncopal episodes upon exertion.

Operation

Jesica, whose blood type was O-positive, had a congenital heart condition (restrictive cardiomyopathy and secondary nonreactive pulmonary hypertension) that resulted in reduced blood perfusion in her lungs. On February 7, 2003, she received the heart and lung transplant at Duke University Hospital. The new organs had been flown in from Boston. James Jaggers, Santillan's transplant surgeon, was informed by Duke's Clinical Transplant Immunology Laboratory that blood test results proving that the organ blood type (type A) and Jesica's blood type (O-Positive) did not match just as the surgery was ending.

Upon discovery of the medical error, the transplant team administered high-dose immunosuppressant drugs and plasmapheresis to prevent immediate organ rejection, which would cause the antibodies in the blood to attack and destroy the new organs. After the operation, the patient was kept on life support with mechanical ventilation in the pediatric intensive care unit while a donor for a second transplant was sought.

Her immune system, detecting incompatible proteins from the mismatched donor organs, initiated a severe rejection response, attacking the transplanted organs and leading to further complications. Jesica experienced a heart attack on February 10 and a seizure on February 16. On February 10, Santillan's lung function deteriorated and mechanical ventilation was replaced with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).

Second transplant

On February 19, 2003, a head CT scan was performed, which showed no evidence of irreversible brain damage at that time.

The surgery began at 6:00 a.m. and was completed by 10:15 a.m. Jesica was transferred to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) off extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) but remained on mechanical ventilation. Initial post-operative evaluations indicated that her new heart and lungs were functioning adequately, with no immediate changes to her neurological status.

Her family was approached by the hospital to determine if her salvageable organs could be donated for use in other transplant patients. On the advice of their attorneys, the family declined. Life support was maintained until 5:00 p.m. to allow loved ones to say goodbye. After cardiac medications were discontinued, her heart stopped at 5:07 p.m., and ventilator support was withdrawn three minutes later. Jesica was 17 years old at the time of her death.

Jesica's Hope Chest

Jesica's Hope Chest (JHC) was a charity that Mack Mahoney named after her. It received donations for houses which then go to families who have at least one heart patient. Ten years after Santillan's death, allegations surfaced that money for the charity was being misappropriated.

See also

  • Hyperacute rejection
  • ABO-incompatible transplantation
  • Sarah Murnaghan lung transplant controversy

References

  • Background Information on Jesica Santillan Blood Type Mismatch
  • Grief's Gravity: When Jesica Santillan died of a botched heart-lung transplant, Nancy Rommelmann was nearly swallowed by the story February 19, 2004
  • Statement from Duke University Medical Center
  • CBS 60 Minutes report "Anatomy Of A Mistake" video (text version)