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Lung Transplant

Medically reviewed by Drugs.com. Last updated on Nov 27, 2023.

What is a Lung Transplant?

Harvard Health Publishing

In lung transplant surgery, someone with life-threatening respiratory problems is given one or two healthy lungs taken from a person who has died. If one lung is transplanted, the procedure is called a single-lung transplant. If both lungs are transplanted, it is a bilateral or double-lung transplant.

Lungs for transplantation usually come from young, healthy people who have had severe brain damage because of trauma or cardiac arrest (a stopped heart). Their lungs and other organs are maintained with life-support machinery.

Under certain circumstances, two living people can donate small parts of their lungs to one person in desperate need of a transplant. Each person donates one lobe (section) of a lung. This rare use of living donors is done in some cases because of a great shortage of suitable lungs from donors who have died. Entire lungs are never transplanted from a healthy living donor because of the high risk of complications. Living donor lung transplants are very uncommon.

Most lung donors have been healthy nonsmokers younger than 55. An extensive medical evaluation is done to make sure that the lungs are healthy and free of serious damage and disease. Following evaluation, the lungs are often judged unsuitable for transplantation.

Donors and recipients need to be about the same height, so the lungs will be the appropriate size. In addition, blood types are matched to reduce the risk that the recipient's immune system will attack a transplanted lung as a foreign object. This process is called organ rejection.

Relatively few lung transplants are done because of the general shortage of transplant donors and because so few donors meet the strict criteria for lung transplantation. The average wait for a lung transplant in the United States is just under two years. About 10% of those waiting die each year.

Potential donor organs usually are found through an organization called the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS). After matching for body size and blood type, people are selected to receive new lungs based on several criteria.

What It's Used For

Lung transplantation is used to treat end-stage, life-threatening lung disease when other treatment options have failed. Because of the risks involved, transplants usually are reserved for people who are likely to die of their lung disease within one to two years. Receiving a lung transplant appears to improve a person's quality of life. However, life expectancy does not always improve.

Lung transplants in the United States usually are done for one of the following reasons:

Most lung transplants are done in adults between the ages of 18 and 65. A few transplants are performed each year in children, mostly teenagers, and in older adults.

Preparation

To be considered for a lung transplant, you must apply to be added to the waiting list at 1 or more specific transplant centers. Each center has its own standards for admission. In general, a good candidate:

If you meet these standards, you will have an extensive pre-transplant medical evaluation. This focuses on making sure you truly need the transplant and are medically able to withstand the difficult procedure. The evaluation often includes blood tests, X-rays, measurements of lung and heart function, and psychological testing. Your blood and tissue types are determined so that a suitable donor can be found.

While waiting for a lung transplant, you will meet regularly with members of the transplant team. These specialists offer a wide range of support services during the long period before the transplant. You probably will wear a beeper so you can be contacted as soon as a suitable donor is found.

How It's Done

When a donor lung becomes available, a regional organ bank follows guidelines from UNOS. The candidate at the top of the list who is best suited to receive the transplant is selected. When you are selected and contacted, you will go to the transplant center immediately for surgery.

An intravenous line will be inserted into a vein in your arm to deliver fluids and drugs, and you will receive general anesthesia. The transplant surgeon will inspect the donor lung or lungs to make sure they look healthy and suitable for transplantation. The surgeon then will make a large incision in your chest. The incision may be horizontal, extending from below the shoulder blade, around the side to the front of the chest. It also may be made through the middle of the breastbone. For a double-lung transplant, a large "clamshell" incision may be used that exposes the entire front portion of the chest. A clamshell incision extends from one armpit to the other, under the rib cage, so that the chest opens like a clamshell.

For single-lung transplants, the surgeon collapses the failing lung, ties off its blood vessels and cuts its main airway (bronchus). The old lung is removed, and the donor lung is positioned in the chest. The airway is reconnected, and then the lung's blood vessels are reattached. Once the new lung is in place, the surgeon looks inside it with a telescope (bronchoscopy). He or she will confirm that the lung looks pink and healthy inside and will remove any blood or excess mucus from the airway.

In most cases, a double-lung transplant is like a single-lung transplant done twice. One lung is transplanted first (usually the lung with the poorest function), followed by the other lung. During some transplants, the patient is connected temporarily to a heart-lung bypass machine, which pumps blood and supplies it with fresh oxygen.

At the end of the transplant procedure, the chest incision will be closed. You will be taken to a surgical intensive care unit, where you will remain until you are stable. A mechanical ventilator will help you to breathe for most of this time. The entire transplant team -- including surgeons, transplant specialists, nurses and respiratory technicians -- will monitor you closely.

You will receive drugs to suppress your immune system and prevent your body from rejecting the transplanted lung. You also will receive drugs to improve lung function, treat infections, and reduce pain and discomfort. When you no longer need help breathing and your condition is stable, you will be transferred to a regular hospital unit. Physical therapy and occupational therapy begin about two days after surgery. Frequent blood tests, chest X-rays and tests of lung function will be done.

Follow-Up

Before being discharged from the hospital, you will be given clear instructions:

Risks

Although lung transplants were first done in the 1960s, the procedure was not used widely until the 1990s. Survival statistics have improved over time. But lung transplants remain very risky, especially compared to kidney or heart transplants.

Complications are common. Within the first 3 to 4 weeks after surgery, patients may have an episode of organ rejection. They receive intensive drug treatment for a few days to suppress the immune system.

Immediately after surgery, there are also risks of infection, bleeding, malfunction of the donor lung, inflammation of the lung and poor healing.

Long-term use of immune-suppressing drugs can cause diabetes, kidney damage, osteoporosis and increased susceptibility to life-threatening infections.

When To Call a Professional

When you are discharged from the hospital, you will be told about potential problems and warning signs.

If you develop a problem, consult the information you received when you left the hospital. Contact your transplant doctor immediately if you develop:

Additional Info

United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)
https://www.unos.org/

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/

 


Further information

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