Gulf News

UAE’s first double lung transplant

OTHER ORGANS FROM SAME DECEASED DONOR HELP SAVE THREE MORE LIVES

- BY SAMIHAH ZAMAN Staff Reporter

Other organs from the same deceased donor help save three more lives |

The first double-lung transplant has been performed in the UAE at the Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi. Multi-disciplina­ry teams of surgeons in the capital also performed three other transplant surgeries with organs from the same deceased donor, saving four lives on the same day. The transplant surgeries took place on June 10, and all recipients are currently recovering well, the Cleveland Clinic revealed yesterday.

As reported by Gulf News, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, the country’s first multi-organ transplant centre, performed the UAE’s first lung transplant last February, giving a 53-yearold Emirati patient a new lease of life with one lung taken from a deceased donor. The latest milestone in transplant surgeries in the UAE, however, saw both the recipient patient’s lungs removed and replaced with donor organs during a single surgery.

Dr Reda Souilamas, chair of thoracic surgery at the hospital, led the double-lung transplant, assisted by a team of 10 specialist­s, including cardiothor­acic surgeons, pulmonolog­ists, anaesthesi­ologists and critical care nurses.

The recipient, a 45-year-old expatriate female, had been suffering from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a progressiv­e disease that causes extensive scarring of the lungs. The condition is incurable and patients are typically given a three- to fiveyear survival rate after diagnosis without transplant surgery.

“In the case of this patient, the lungs were as hard as rocks and she had been confined to a wheelchair for years, dependent on oxygen. The disease had also affected her heart function as the heart was not receiving enough oxygenated blood. In fact, when we asked the patient to stand to take a quick measuremen­t, she was soon out of breath and needed to be oxygenated,” Dr Souilamas told Gulf News.

The patient had been on the transplant list for about a year, and among all matches for the donor organs, her condition was the worst.

“I doubt she would have survived another year without the surgery, and as soon as she was diagnosed, she was evaluated for a transplant,” said Dr Fadi Hamed, intensivis­t and lung transplant pulmonolog­ist at the hospital.

Once the deceased donor’s organs were procured, the lung transplant was undertaken. At the same time, a surgical team led by Dr Antonio Pinna, transplant surgeon at the hospital’s Digestive Diseases Institute, also began the liver transplant for a female patient from Ras Al Khaimah who had been suffering from severe cirrhosis. In addition, one of the donor’s kidneys was transplant­ed into a patient on the hospital’s waiting list by a team led headed by Dr Bashir Sankari, chair of surgical subspecial­ties and head of the hospital’s transplant programme. The other kidney was transporte­d for transplant­ation to a patient at the Shaikh Khalifa Medical City.

Dr Souilamas explained that the lungs must be the first organs to be transplant­ed since they act as a filter between the body and the external environmen­t. “In this case, all the transplant procedures took place within a day of us receiving the consent to harvest the donor organs. We started with the lung transplant, ensuring that the time between lung procuremen­t and transplant­ation [ischemia time] was kept to just five-and-a-half hours. The other surgeries were also conducted simultaneo­usly.”

He added that the hospital expected to undertake about five to eight more multi-organ transplant­s by the end of the year.

“The success of this surgery means that Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi is now able to offer both single and complex double-lung transplant­s under its comprehens­ive multi-organ transplant programme,” Dr Souilamas said.

“When we opened our doors in March 2015, we made a promise to bring advanced complex and critical care services to the UAE, removing the need to travel abroad for life-saving medical care. This latest multi-organ transplant marks another significan­t moment in that journey. It is also worth reflecting on the incredible contributi­on that the donor and the donor’s family have made by sharing their precious organs — four lives have been transforme­d by this selfless gift,” said Dr Rakesh Suri, chief executive officer at Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi.

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Dr Reda Souilamas
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