First bladder transplant reaches 6-month milestone

Publicly released:
International
Dr. Nima Nassiri with patient Oscar Larrainzar/Photo Credit: Nick Carranza
Dr. Nima Nassiri with patient Oscar Larrainzar/Photo Credit: Nick Carranza

The first-in-human bladder transplant with a kidney has reached a promising six-month milestone, according to international researchers in a new feasibility study. The eight-hour operation was performed in May 2025 on a 41-year-old man with end-stage kidney disease and a severely damaged bladder. Previously, bladder transplants have not been possible due to the complex network of blood vessels in the bladder, so surgeons have often repurposed a segment of the bowel instead. In this study, the donor bladder was transplanted as a true, separate vascularised organ with its own blood supply, independent from the transplanted kidney. During the procedure, the kidney began functioning immediately when blood flow was restored, and the bladder graft showed good blood flow and viability throughout the operation. Six months post-surgery, the patient has functional bladder storage and is able to urinate, while his kidney remains stable and continues to function on standard immunosuppression therapy, with no signs of organ rejection. The authors say the procedure could offer patients with end-stage bladder disease an alternative treatment with reduced complications.

News release

From: The Lancet

The Lancet: Six-month results confirm feasibility and early success of first in-human combined bladder-kidney transplant

The first-in-human fully vascularized bladder graft transplanted with a kidney has reached a promising six-month milestone, according to a new feasibility study published in The Lancet. The procedure, performed in May 2025, demonstrated technical feasibility and early functional success at 6 months post-surgery.

The surgical team performed an eight-hour operation on a 41-year-old man with end-stage kidney disease and a severely damaged bladder. Unlike other currently used methods, the donor bladder was transplanted as a true, separate vascularized organ with its own blood supply, independent from the transplanted kidney. During the procedure, the kidney began functioning immediately when blood flow was restored, and the bladder graft showed good blood flow and viability throughout the operation. Six months post-surgery, the patient has functional bladder storage and spontaneous voiding, while his kidney remains stable and continues to function on standard immunosuppression therapy, with no signs of organ rejection.

The authors say that this new procedure could offer some patients with end-stage bladder disease an alternative to bowel-based urinary reconstruction, potentially reducing metabolic and infection-related complications. Future clinical trials with more patients and longer-term follow-ups are already underway, with plans to continue to refine the techniques for future cases.

For videos and images, please download the full press kit from UCLA Health here: First human bladder transplant performed at UCLA - Urology | UCLA Health

Journal/
conference:
The Lancet
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of California, USA
Funder: American Urological Association’s Research Scholar Award, the National Kidney Registry, OneLegacy, and University of California Los Angeles Department of Urology.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.