Pig Heart Transplants For Humans Are On The WayShe's got the heart of a pig and that's a good thing. Researchers are reporting that a baboon is still alive after receiving a heart transplanted from a pig The Telegraph reports. The baboon has lived with the heart in its abdomen for more than a year.Its longevity is a milestone. Previously when researchers tried to transplant pig hearts  into primates the primates' bodies would reject the transplants within six months The Telegraph reports. Ultimately researchers want to make pig hearts transplantable into humans. Pigs could provide a larger supply of the organ than human donors can closing the tragic gap between supply and demand. In the U.S. about 3000 people are on the waiting list for a heart transplant but only about 2000 hearts become available each year according to the U.S. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute which conducted the baboon study. Those who are waiting can use mechanical devices but those aren't perfect the institute says.Pig hearts are promising because they're close enough to human hearts in anatomy. Doctors also already use heart valves taken from pigs and cows in human surgeries. It seems pig hearts are just a little too foreign for primate bodies to accept easily however. In previous studies the hearts would trigger a massive immune response in the primates they were transplanted into. Such responses can be deadly and they've been a major barrier to developing pig heart transplants The Telegraph reports. It will be years before pig hearts are ready for human patients if they ever are.To make hearts that baboons and in the future humans won't reject the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute team specially engineered its  pigs to have some human genes and to lack some pig genes. The researchers also gave their baboons drugs to suppress their immune systems. (Human patients take immunosuppressant drugs when they get organ transplants so that's not unusual.)It seems what made the transplants work was just the right balance of genetic engineering and immune system-suppressing drugs. In an abstract the team submitted  to a meeting of heart and torso surgeons the team reports that when it tried other drug regimens their baboons died in less than a year. Baboons who received hearts from un-genetically modified pigs rejected the hearts within a day.  Now that the team has shown pig hearts are able to hang around inside primates safely the next step will be to actually replace baboons' hearts with pig hearts The Telegraph reports. The baboon in this study has a pig heart in its body alongside its own heart which is doing all the work.This baboon study hasn't been published in a peer-reviewed journal yet but its authors presented it yesterday at the annual meeting of the American Association for Thoracic Surgery.[The Telegraph]