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W ILLE M J . K OLFF
1911–2009
Elected in 1989
“For innovative and unique artificial organ research and for leadership
in bringing advanced engineering concepts to artificial organ design,
construction, and implantation.”
BY LAURA GUNDRY
SUBMITTED BY THE NAE HOME SECRETARY
WILLEM J. KOLFF, widely considered the father of the
field of artificial organs, and University of Utah distinguished
professor emeritus of bioengineering, surgery, and medicine,
passed away on February 11, 2009, at the age of 97, in Newtown
Square, Pennsylvania. Dr. Kolff invented the kidney dialysis
machine and was instrumental in the development of the
intra-aortic balloon pump, membrance oxygenator, artificial
heart, and artificial eye.
Dr. Kolff based his highly productive research career
on collaborative research because he believed it to be the
most effective way of achieving his goal of developing and
exploiting the possibilities of artificial human organs as a
means to “restore people to an enjoyable existence.”
Due to his groundbreaking work on the artificial kidney,
millions of patients worldwide have benefited from life-
sustaining hemodialysis. His artificial heart is still in use,
in subsequent designs, as a bridge to transplantation in
patients with heart failure. Dr. Kolff’s broad vision inspired
his colleagues to explore a wide variety of organs—an effort
that contributed to pioneering research on such other artificial
devices as the lung, placenta, ear, arms, and legs.
139
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140 MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
Dr. Kolff was born on February 14, 1911, in Leiden in the
Netherlands. He received his medical degree at the University
of Leiden Medical School in Holland in 1938. He received
his Ph.D. at the University of Groningen in Holland in 1946.
As a young physician in the Netherlands before World War
II, he developed an interest in the artificial kidney when he
witnessed the death of a young man due to kidney failure.
In 1939 he began developing the first crude artificial kidney
by finding parts and materials from a local factory in Nazi-
occupied Holland. By 1942 he developed a prototype machine,
and three years later the first patient was saved by an artificial
kidney.
After the war, Dr. Kolff and his family immigrated to the
United States in 1950, and he joined the Cleveland Clinic in
Ohio as a researcher. At Cleveland he turned to the study of
cardiovascular problems. His first work on an artificial heart
began in 1957. He built one of the first heart-lung machines, a
device that made open-heart surgery possible for the first time.
He also improved his dialysis machine. The first membrane
oxygenators were used successfully in patients in 1955.
In 1967, Dr. Kolff went to the University of Utah, where
he headed the Institute for Biomedical Engineering and the
Division of Artificial Organs. He continued his work on
the artificial heart, and in 1982, under his supervision, the
first “permanent” artificial heart was implanted into Seattle
dentist Barney Clark at the University of Utah Hospital. Clark
survived four months. When he died, the artificial heart was
still functioning. The feat put the University of Utah at the
forefront of artificial organ research and made Dr. Kolff and
his team international medical celebrities.
Dr. Kolff’s presence at the University of Utah acted as a
magnet to attract scientists from all over the world who were
interested in artificial organ research, and under his leadership
the university has since developed one of the world’s leading
artificial organ research centers. Although he officially retired
in 1986, Dr. Kolff continued to work as a research professor
and director of the Kolff Laboratory at the University of Utah
until 1997.
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W ILLE M J . K OLFF 141
During his lifetime, Dr. Kolff published numerous books
and more than 600 papers and articles, was inducted into the
Inventors Hall of Fame in 1985, and received hundreds of
awards. In 1990, Life magazine named him one of the 100 most
important Americans of the 20th century. He was elected to the
National Academy of Engineering in 1989. He also received
the 2002 Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research,
one of the highest honors in American medicine, as well as
more than 12 honorary doctorates from universities all over
the world.
Dr. Kolff once told a reporter that his mind rarely took a rest
from the mechanics of medical device designs and how they
could save or improve lives. “I nearly always do something.
I can’t bear to just lie in the sun. It would drive me crazy,” he
said. Dr. Donald Olsen, a former colleague and director of the
Utah Artificial Heart Institute, said Dr. Kolff’s work influenced
most of those working today in artificial organs research. He
said many worked either in Dr. Kolff’s lab or with him on site.
Dr. Olsen also said that Dr. Kolff had the ability to “recognize
new technologies and find an immediate application to his
own research. He also recognized talent, so that over the years
he developed a tremendously important team of researchers.”
His son Jack wrote:
As a father, he was an active family man. He spent
summer vacations with his family traveling through the
United States pulling a home-made trailer holding a boat,
camping gear, and compartments to hold personal gear
for each of his five children and their various friends.
Any other free time was spent on the family’s 125-acre
tree farm, one hour outside of Cleveland, where many
a Cleveland Clinic resident or fellow joined the family
for painting, planting or chopping wood in exchange for
hamburgers and hotdogs.
Dad always tried to reserve time for his family and
openly criticized medical meetings or conferences that
were scheduled on weekends. As an antidote, he would
frequently include one or two children on selected
medical travels where they would enjoy the local area
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142 MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
while he attended the meeting. Saturday evenings he
would engage in family board games or card games and
Sunday spring mornings were reserved for early bird
walks.
He encouraged all of his children to pursue their own
careers, yet three of them followed him into medicine
and one into medical architecture.
Dr. Kolff is survived by four sons, Jack, Kees, Albert, and
Therus; one daughter, Adrie Burnett; 12 grandchildren; and 6
great-grandchildren.
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