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A future for medicine
The New Indian Express
|August 27, 2025
From petri dishes to the operating room, the rise of organoids and bioengineered organs is revolutionising transplant science, offering new hope for millions, while raising complex ethical questions along the way
Imagine a world where no one dies waiting for a transplant. A world where organs are not harvested from donors, but grown in laboratories, customised to each patient's DNA. What once belonged to the realm of science fiction is rapidly becoming science fact. At the heart of this revolution are organoids-tiny, self-organising three-dimensional structures derived from stem cells that mimic real human organs. While they may be miniature in scale, their implications are enormous. The fusion of stem cell biology, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine is poised to redefine the future of organ transplantation and disease modeling. But as we move closer to growing life in a lab, we must also ask: what are the boundaries of this power?
Globally, millions suffer from end-stage organ failure — particularly involving the kidneys, liver, lungs, and heart. While organ transplantation remains a powerful life-saving intervention, the demand far outstrips supply. In the US alone, over 100,000 people are on the organ transplant waiting list, with an average of 17 dying every day due to the unavailability of donor organs. In India, the numbers are alarming, with between 300,000 and 500,000 patients waiting for new life-saving transplants, of mostly kidneys, sometimes for years.
This dire shortage has long prompted scientists to explore alternatives: from xenotransplantation (using animal organs) to mechanical devices like ventricular assist pumps. However, both solutions face major limitations — immune rejection, ethical dilemmas, and technical inefficiencies. The dream, therefore, has been to create organs from scratch, using a patient's own cells to bypass rejection and scarcity altogether. This is where organoids step in.
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