KEY POINTS
  • Blood grown in a laboratory has been transfused into humans for the first time in a landmark clinical trial.
  • Two patients in the U.K. have so far received tiny doses of the lab-grown blood as part of a wider trial to see how it behaves inside the body.
  • If successful, U.K. researchers say the technology could significantly improve treatment for people with blood disorders and rare blood types.
Blood grown in a laboratory has been transfused into humans for the first time in a landmark clinical trial.

LONDON — Blood grown in a laboratory has been transfused into humans for the first time in a landmark clinical trial that U.K. researchers say could significantly improve treatment for people with blood disorders and rare blood types.

Two patients in the U.K. received tiny doses — equivalent to a few teaspoons — of the lab-grown blood in the first stage of a wider trial designed to see how it behaves inside the body.