There are more than 40 000 infants born with congenital heart disease annually in the USA, or whom >500 would benefit from early heart transplantation. 1 Despite advances in surgical and medical techniques, complex congenital heart disease in infants, particularly single ventricle pathology, continues to be associated with significant mortality and morbidity. 2 Orthotopic heart transplantation (OHTx) offers the best prospect of long-term survival of these patients, but infant mortality on the heart transplant wait-list is higher than for any other solid organ transplant group. 3,4 In recent years, there have been several advances in genetic engineering of pigs to mitigate the vigorous antibody-mediated rejection of a pig heart transplanted into a nonhuman primate (NHP).Heterotopic heart transplants in NHPs (in the abdomen, where they are not supporting the circulation) have functioned for >24 months (Figure 1). 5 Initially, the success of pig OHTx in NHPs was limited, with few reports of long-term survival. [6][7][8] relatively