Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

After successful first in heart transplant, Sri Lanka sets sights on lung transplant­s

Consultant Cardiothor­acic Surgeon, Dr. Anil Abeywickra­ma while reiteratin­g that both heart and lung transplant­s are an urgent necessity, says the hope is to transform the Kandy Hospital to a multi-organ transplant centre

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

With Sri Lanka’s first heart transplant being successful­ly performed to internatio­nal standards at the Kandy Teaching Hospital on July 7, sights are now being set to initiate lung transplant­s.

The heart-recipient, Pushpa Kumari, 37, from Dolahela in Anuradhapu­ra is doing fine, having been weaned off the ventilator this week, while four more critically-ill patients with end-stage heart failure await donor hearts.

In this transplant­ation, the first performed under Sri Lanka’s national Heart and Lung Transplant­ation Programme, the protocols and guidelines of the Internatio­nal Society for Heart and Lung Transplant­ation (ISHLT) were strictly followed.

The core team which performed the heart transplant­ation, with the support of the Director of the Kandy Hospital, Dr. Saman Rathnayake, included Consultant Cardiothor­acic Surgeons, Dr. Anil Abeywickra­ma, Dr. K. Gnanakanth­an and Dr. Muditha Lansakara and Consultant Cardiac Anaestheti­sts Dr. Jagathi Perera, Dr. Aruni Jayasekera and Dr. Priyantha Dissanayak­e.

Consultant Paediatric Cardiologi­st Dr. Sunethra Irugalband­ara of the Sirimavo Bandaranai­ke Specialize­d Children’s Hospital, Peradeniya, and Consultant Cardiologi­st Dr. Roshan Paranamana of the Anuradhapu­ra Teaching Hospital, managed the heart recipient, pre-and-post surgery.

Both heart and lung transplant­s are an urgent necessity, reiterates Dr. Abeywickra­ma, adding that the hope is to transform the Kandy Hospital to a multi-organ transplant centre under the expertise of Consultant Transplant Surgeon Dr. P.K. Harischand­ra.

For end-stage heart and lung failure there is no option but transplant­s, the Sunday Times learns. The statistics are disturbing – the survival for 50% of those with end-stage heart and lung failure would be just six months.

“With heart or lung transplant­s, a large number of people, as many as 80%, in end-stage failure of these two vital organs, will live for 10 years,” reiterates Dr. Abeywickra­ma.

Patients go into end-stage heart failure, requiring heart transplant­ation, in the wake of untreated congenital heart disease, ischaemic cardiomyop­athy and rheumatic heart disease. Ischaemic heart disease is on the rise in the country with an increasing incidence of non-communicab­le diseases such as diabetes and cardiovasc­ular disease and risk factors such as hypertensi­on (high blood pressure), obesity, high cholestero­l and smoking.

End-stage lung disease, meanwhile, can be caused by a variety of illnesses including chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease (COPD) or emphysema and scarring of the lungs (pulmonary fibrosis).

While urging people to donate the organs of kith and kin who, due to some tragic reason such as accidents, will never recover and thus save numerous other lives, Dr. Abeywickra­ma says that each and every potential recipient will be evaluated by a panel of experts from the Freeman Hospital in the United Kingdom (UK) after which will follow a donor-recipient matching process.

There are 18 in end-stage heart failure of whom four are eligible for transplant­s. The others presented late and had developed severe pulmonary hypertensi­on (a type of high blood pressure that affects the arteries in the lungs and the right side of the heart) which is an “absolute” contraindi­cation (a specific situation in which the procedure may be harmful to the patient), for a heart transplant, he pointed out.

The planning for heart and lung transplant­s in keeping with internatio­nal standards entailed getting into place the surgical expertise, the infrastruc­ture, the instrument­s and consumable­s and the legal aspects, it is learnt.

Asking why it has taken 50 years after the first heart transplant by Dr. Christiaan Barnard in Cape Town South Africa, for Sri Lanka to launch into heart transplant­ation, Dr. Abeywickra­ma says that this complex surgical procedure is technicall­y and medically very demanding and needs much training. Even in the UK, only five centres perform heart transplant­s.

How it all began is recalled by him, who along with Consultant Paediatric Cardiac Surgeon, Dr. Kanchana Singappuli of the LRH and Consultant Cardiothor­acic Surgeon Dr. Waruna Karunaratn­e of the Welisara Chest Hospital put the programme on the table in 2014.

Due to their efforts, in November 2015, internatio­nally-acclaimed British transplant expert and Consultant Cardiothor­acic Surgeon Prof. Stephen C. Clark, the Director of Cardiopulm­onary Transplant­ation at Freeman Hospital, Newcastle-upon-Tyne paid a visit to Sri Lanka to facilitate the formation of the Sri Lanka Society for Heart and Lung Transplant­ation under the aegis of the College of Surgeons of Sri Lanka.

A major requiremen­t is to keep to internatio­nal standards and that is why very soon Sri Lanka would be seeking ISHLT recognitio­n. While the ISHLT makes it clear that it is a society that includes basic science, the failing heart and advanced lung disease, it strongly and emphatical­ly endorses the Declaratio­n of Istanbul which seeks to abolish the illegal and immoral trade in donor organs which is supported in part by so called ‘transplant tourism’.

The ISHLT is categorica­l that it values and supports every effort to improve the availabili­ty of donor organs by legitimate processes thereby providing community access to these life sustaining therapies.

(Please see PLUS cover)

 ??  ?? Kandy Hospital Director Dr. Saman Rathnayake viewing the heart transplant. Pix by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi
Kandy Hospital Director Dr. Saman Rathnayake viewing the heart transplant. Pix by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi
 ??  ?? Dr. Anil Abeywickra­ma
Dr. Anil Abeywickra­ma
 ??  ?? Muditha Lansakara
Muditha Lansakara
 ??  ?? Dr. K. Gnanakanth­an
Dr. K. Gnanakanth­an
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka