The Columbus Dispatch

Woman recovering after rare windpipe transplant

Complex surgery considered last resort

- Marion Renault and Marshall Ritzel

NEW YORK – Sonia Sein said she spent the last six years “trying to catch every breath at every moment” after extensive treatment for severe asthma that damaged her windpipe.

She is breathing freely again after getting an unusual transplant. In January, when doctors at New York’s Mount Sinai replaced her trachea, the tube that ferries air from the mouth to the lungs.

Doctors said this drastic operation could potentiall­y help other people, including COVID-19 patients left with serious windpipe damage from breathing machines.

“We’ve talked for 100 years about just putting in a new windpipe,” said University of Washington surgeon Dr. Albert Merati, who had no role in the recent transplant.

But hooking up a trachea from a donor to a recipient’s blood supply is challengin­g and would only be considered as a last resort, experts said.

“It is just technicall­y extremely difficult,” said Dr. David Klassen, chief medical officer for the United Network for Organ Sharing, which oversees the nation’s transplant system. “It’s been a very difficult thing to crack.”

Experts said it’s too soon to deem Sein’s transplant a total success – which UNOS said is the first of its kind in the U.S. Sein has to take powerful drugs to prevent organ rejection, but doctors hope to try to wean her off in a few years. Less than three months after the operation, there haven’t been complicati­ons or signs of rejection.

“If it was going to be a failure, we would know by now. It’s quite promising,” said Dr. Alec Patterson, a transplant surgeon at Washington University in St. Louis who was not involved in the operation. “It’s a major step forward.”

Sein’s ordeal started in 2014 when doctors put a tube in her throat to help her breathe during a severe asthma attack. It saved the 56-year-old social worker’s life but damaged her trachea.

Several surgeries to reconstruc­t her windpipe didn’t help and left Sein in despair at constant risk of suffocation.

Until now, doctors have had few good options to treat serious trachea damage.

The windpipe is much more than a simple tube.

“Every breath we take has to be expertly conveyed from the tip of the nose to the last air sac in the lungs,” Merati said.

Over the years, various methods have been used to repair or reconstruc­t damaged windpipes. Doctors can remove damaged sections, or fix or replace them with prosthetic­s, lab-grown tissue or self-supplied tissue from a patient’s skin and rib cartilage. But these techniques might not restore full function to the organ, which uses tiny hairs to move mucus around and has the perfect flexibility to expand and collapse as we breathe, swallow and cough.

And these methods are not possible in the most dire situations where a patient’s entire windpipe is damaged.

Something as extreme as a transplant could be their only hope, said Dr. Eric Genden, a Mount Sinai surgeon who led the team.

“Right now, we don’t talk much about those patients because there is no option for them,” Genden said. “We’re hoping that this procedure will … help not only the patients that are teetering on disaster, but also the patients that are currently kind of deemed hopeless.”

In an 18-hour operation, a team of more than 50 specialist­s transplant­ed a donor trachea, carefully reconnecti­ng it to a complex web of tiny blood vessels.

“When we saw the organ come to life, we knew we had jumped the first hurdle,” Genden said.

Doctors said the procedure could help others with tracheal birth defects, untreatabl­e airway diseases or extensive damage from ventilator­s.

“This could help care for COVID-19 patients,” Merati said. “Without a doubt, we are already seeing some impact” from patients being on breathing machines.

Sein is recovering at home and “is breathing wonderfull­y,” Genden said.

The surgery has allowed her to do things she couldn’t before.

“Now I feel good,” Sein said. “I dance with my granddaugh­ter; we chase each other around the house. I jump on my grandson. We play; we watch a movie together. I cook for them. We’re making the memories together.”

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

 ?? MARSHALL RITZEL/AP ?? Trachea transplant recipient Sonia Sein gives a blood sample during a checkup at Mt. Sinai hospital in New York in March.
MARSHALL RITZEL/AP Trachea transplant recipient Sonia Sein gives a blood sample during a checkup at Mt. Sinai hospital in New York in March.

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