A French surgeon has carried out the world's first-ever successful transplant of an entire face, the daily Le Parisien reported Thursday, according to dpa. The 12-hour procedure was performed on June 26 and 27 at the Henri-Mondor public hospital in Creteil, a suburb of Paris, by Laurent Lantieri. The patient was a 35-year-old man whose face had been ravaged by neurofibromatosis, a genetic illness in which the nerve tissue grows tumours. It is also known as Elephant man disease. The operation included removing the eyelids, their muscles and the tear ducts from an unidentified donor and grafting them onto the face of the patient, identified only as Jerome. In April, a Spanish team of surgeons had claimed to carry out the world's first face transplant, but their procedure did not include the eyelids and tear ducts. "He walks, he eats, he talks," Lantieri said of Jerome. "His beard has already begun to grow on his new face." The surgeon said Jerome was pleased with his new face. "The first time he saw himself in the mirror, he raised both thumbs," he said. The risks for Jerome now are psychological and the threat of rejection of the new tissue by his body. The operation took place five years after another landmark operation by French doctors, who transplanted the lower half of a face on a woman whose features had been disfigured by a dog. Lantieri said his new project would be to carry out total face transplants on burn victims. "I still have not resolved all the difficulties to carry out face transplants on this type of patient," he said. "That is my next challenge."