Cape Times

Breakthrou­gh lung surgery in SA with help of internatio­nal experts

- STAFF WRITER

IN A first for South Africa, and a watershed moment for patients with a devastatin­g lung disease known as chronic thromboemb­olic pulmonary hypertensi­on (CTEPH), a team of cardiologi­sts from Stellenbos­ch University (SU) and Tygerberg Hospital recently performed a new, minimally invasive surgical procedure known as balloon pulmonary angioplast­y (BPA) on three patients.

The team led by doctors Hellmuth Weich and Lloyd Joubert of the SU Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences (FMHS) used small balloons to dilate blocked arteries in the lungs of patients affected by CTEPH.

Weich and Joubert were supported by Professor Irene Lang from Vienna, Austria, a world leader in this field.

CTEPH is a rare and progressiv­e form of pulmonary hypertensi­on and is caused by recurrent blood clots that prevent blood flowing through the lungs. Patients become increasing­ly short of breath, and most wait more than two years before the correct diagnosis is made, as the disease is often misdiagnos­ed in its early stages. Left untreated, heart failure will eventually result as the blockage to blood flow increases beyond the heart’s ability to pump.

Patients with CTEPH frequently have a poor quality of life in South Africa, with limited treatment options. Because of this, it has traditiona­lly been considered an “orphan disease” with many patients left without hope.

In a statement, the university said improvemen­t in the treatment of CTEPH patients at Tygerberg Hospital began some time ago, when Professor

Brian Allwood from the FMHS Division of Pulmonolog­y was trained in the diagnosis and management of such patients at Massachuse­tts General Hospital and Harvard University in Boston in the US.

“For some patients, surgical removal of larger clots is an alternativ­e and potentiall­y curative treatment option. However, this is not possible for many due to the location of clots in the lungs, as well as the poor general health of patients with advanced disease.

“BPA is a less invasive approach, and sometimes the only option for patients, but until now it has not been performed with success in South Africa.”

The team of Tygerberg’s Division of Cardiology has gained significan­t experience in life-saving interventi­ons for major bleeding from the lungs due to tuberculos­is and its complicati­ons.

Although this is a very different condition to CTEPH, the approach to these interventi­ons in the lung arteries is not dissimilar to BPA and this was a first step in the launching of a BPA programme, SU said.

However, because there was no expertise with this procedure in South Africa and having a number of patients needing BPA, the team approached Lang, who runs one of the biggest BPA programmes in Europe, for assistance.

“All three patients who received the minimal invasive BPA treatment had suffered from extreme, long-term shortness of breath which has been resistant to medication.

“Although this was the first in a series of BPA treatments for each of them it is likely that they will all return to a much-improved level of functionin­g and enjoy a better quality of life,” SU said.

As part of a workshop in the management of CTEPH, the team also invited Professor Michael Madani, chief of cardiovasc­ular and thoracic surgery at the University of California, to Cape Town and Tygerberg Hospital.

Chronic blood clots can be removed surgically by means of a surgical procedure known as pulmonary thromboend­arterectom­y (PTE), as the more convention­al alternativ­e to BPA.

“The team of cardiothor­acic surgeons at Tygerberg is experience­d in performing PTE, but were fortunate to have Professor Madani, a world leader in the procedure, to assist Professor Jacques Janson, head of the Division of Cardiothor­acic Surgery, with such a procedure on May 3.”

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