The kidney was flown a few miles from a site in West Baltimore to the University of Maryland Medical Center across town.
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The specially designed drone was able to monitor the organ in flight.
The project was a collaboration between the medical center and the university's medical and engineering schools.
There were dozens of test flights, with deliveries of blood, saline, and a NON-viable kidney, before this actual delivery.
The recipient was a 44-year-old woman who'd been on dialysis for 8 years. She called the feat "amazing."
The team said it took a lot of planning, but it was worth it.
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"This is a major step toward reinventing the way the current system that organs are moved. And I think we help a lot of people this way. It might take a long time, but this is the first step," says Dr. Joseph Scalea, transplant surgeon.
Many times transporting an organ is complicated. It can involve an expensive chartered flight or a commercial flight that runs the risk of being delayed, so doctors say using a drone could make a big difference.
The engineering school is already working on a larger unmanned aircraft which can fly farther and in difficult weather conditions.