The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New lung transplant technique could save lives

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PARIS: A new technique could help nearly double the precious few hours surgeons have to carry out lung transplant­s, raising hopes for saving more lives, said a study released yesterday.

Doctors typically rush to complete a transplant within about six hours of the lungs being taken from a donor, with time being of the essence because the tissue starts to break down.

But the new method, which uses a process called ex-vivo lung perfusion (EVLP), could help keep lungs outside the human body for over 12 hours without significan­tly harming their eventual recipient’s chances of survival.

The extra time means more transplant­s could be performed because organs which were previously too far away could now reach recipients in time, said the study published in The Lancet Respirator­y Medicine journal.

Getting the organs to recipients is the difference between life and death for people on wait lists, and who number about 1,700 in the US and Canada alone.

The process starts with the lungs being taken from a donor and then put on ice immediatel­y. After being moved to the hospital where they are needed, the organs undergo EVLP.

This consists of warming the lungs and continuous­ly pumping a liquid full of oxygen, nutrients and proteins through them, at which point the “paradigm shifts from slowing death to preserving life,” the study says.

If the lungs are simply cooled, standard practice calls for the transplant to happen within six to eight hours of being outside the donor’s body. But with EVLP, which takes at least four hours, the deadline can be pushed out to over 12 hours.

“At a time when there is a critical shortage of lungs available... combining cold preservati­on and EVLP will hopefully make a lot more donor lungs available for successful transplant­ation,” wrote lead author Marcelo Cypel, a surgeon at Toronto General Hospital.

The study focused on 906 adults who got lung transplant­s at Toronto General from 20062015, comparing those whose organs did and did not undergo EVLP. The authors found people who got organs given EVLP and kept outside the human body for more than 12 hours spent a similar amount of time in the hospital as those who did not.

Also, both groups of patients had similar levels of lifethreat­ening complicati­ons and survival rates one year after surgery. — AFP

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