The Sunday Post (Inverness)

GRIEVING FAMILY DEMAND ANSWERS

Wife accuses surgeons of keeping her in the dark

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come from the liver donor. During all the meetings we had with the surgical team and transplant team, nobody suggested there was a possibilit­y of this happening.

“We were told years down the line Tom might be more susceptibl­e to cancer, not that he could die within weeks of the procedure from cancer passed on by the transplant­ed liver.

“It was supposed to give him a new lease of life, but it killed him,” added Judy.

Mr Tyreman’s family were only informed he had cancer two days before he died on February 5, at the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle, two months after his transplant.

They chose not to tell him as he was too ill by that time and they wanted to spare him more anguish. After an inquest at Newcastle Coroner’s Court in September, his death certificat­e records that he “contracted cancer from the donor liver which metastasis­ed aggressive­ly and caused his death”.

His family were never told that another transplant patient given an organ from the same donor had also contracted cancer. They only learned about Pauline, from Ayrshire, last week when they read her story in The Sunday Post.

The two families are now in contact and determined to establish what happened and ensure lessons are learned.

Judy added: “We’d been together for 44 years, always at each other’s side. Tom was always a hard worker, and loved his job running a go-karting circuit, where he was manager.

“But the real joy in his life came from our family.”

Dad to Jonathan, 33, and daughter Emma, 30, his life was turned upside down two years ago when, after feeling unwell for several weeks, he was diagnosed with a fatty liver.

Judy said: “It was a serious illness, but for some reason Tom received no treatment.

“A year ago things worsened. He was told he had cirrhosis and needed a transplant.

“Tom was only on the transplant waiting list for three weeks when we got a call saying a liver was available.

“I’ll never forget him joking when he signed the consent form. He said: ‘I don’t know if I’m signing my own death warrant here’. In fact, he was.

“To think we’d all been elated thinking what a miracle he hadn’t had to wait too long for a transplant when that would be what killed him.”

Like Pauline Hunt, Tom seemed to thrive for the first few days following the transplant but within a couple of weeks, warning signs began to appear.

Tom was in terrible pain, breathless and coughing. Judy said: “We called the Freeman only to be told to take him to our local A&E, despite having been warned to keep Tom away from other people to prevent him getting infections.

“We were incredulou­s, and called the transplant ward and ICU to point out this could be dangerous.

“Instead of acting on our concerns, both department­s told us to go to A&E despite the fact nobody would know him or be expert in transplant­s or what to look for if a transplant went wrong.

“The A&E registrar told us Tom must have a virus and sent us home.

“Tom was supposed to be seen weekly after the transplant by his specialist, but because it was over Christmas and New Year, even

It was supposed to give him a new lease of life, but it killed him instead

He joked that op consent was him signing his own death warrant. In fact, it was

those clinics were reduced to every fortnight.”

Unfortunat­ely, by early January, Tom’s condition had deteriorat­ed significan­tly.

He was in grave agony and his family rushed him back to the hospital.

Judy said: “He was so bad, after being sent back to A&E, we took his hospital bag with us, convinced that this time he’d be kept in. Despite our concerns, he was sent home once more.

“I’m convinced it was a case of the hospital being full over the weekend. By the Monday, Tom was so ill and in so much pain, the only way we could get him into hospital was in a wheelchair. This time the hospital admitted him. He never came home again.”

Two weeks later, his family were finally told he had cancer.

Tom’s sister, Jane Bird, 57, said: “The transplant consultant insisted Tom must have had bowel cancer before the transplant took place.

“There was certainly no suggestion or even considerat­ion that he could have contracted cancer from the donor’s liver. Within two days, our Tom was gone.” Judy said: “We have never been given an explanatio­n over why it took them two weeks to even discover he had cancer. Surely that’s unacceptab­le in this day and age? “There was an inquest in September when we asked whether anything could have been done to save Tom’s life if the hospital had identified that he had cancer sooner.

“But an inquest does not apportion blame, and of course Tom’s transplant surgeon refused to accept that it could have made a difference.”

Pauline Hunt, who has been diagnosed with lethal cancer after getting a kidney from the same donor, said: “We can’t help Tom’s family bring him back but together we can fight to make sure this doesn’t happen again to any other family.”

Pauline has been told she is too ill for chemothera­py and says she has asked doctors not to tell her how long she has to live.

She said: “I have lost loved ones to cancer. I don’t want to know.”

 ??  ?? Emma with mum Judy on her wedding day but her dad had already passed away
Emma with mum Judy on her wedding day but her dad had already passed away
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