Surgery Overview
Lung transplant is an option for a few
people who have severe lung problems that are caused by
cystic fibrosis. The procedure removes the diseased
lungs and replaces them with healthy lungs from a recently deceased
donor.
Sometimes a procedure called a living-donor lobar lung
transplant is performed while a person is waiting for a full lung transplant.
In this procedure, the lower section (lobe) of one lung in each of two living
donors (who may be related or unrelated to the person who has cystic fibrosis)
is transplanted into the person who has cystic fibrosis. Because this
complicated transplant involves two living donors, it is performed less often
than other kinds of lung transplants.
What To Expect After Surgery
After lung transplant surgery, you
will be put on a
ventilator, which is a machine that temporarily takes
over the breathing process. If there are no complications, you will use the
ventilator for 1 to 2 days.
Generally, you will need to stay in
the hospital for 2 to 3 weeks after the transplant.
Why It Is Done
Some people who have severe lung
damage that was caused by cystic fibrosis may get a lung transplant. Experts
aren't sure if a lung transplant helps a child with cystic fibrosis live
longer.1 People who have mild or moderate disease do
not usually get a transplant because the risks are greater than the
benefits.
Several tests can help determine how well a lung
transplant or a living-donor lobar lung transplant might work. These tests
include
lung function tests,
arterial blood gas tests, and exercise
capacity.
In order to be accepted for lung transplant, you must
have an evaluation to find out how severe your lung disease is, whether you
have any other diseases, and whether you are able to follow a complex
pretransplant and follow-up regimen.
A person who is age 12 and older is assigned priority for transplant based on a Lung
Allocation Score. The Lung Allocation Score uses the following measures:
- Waitlist urgency: the expected number of days
lived without a transplant during an additional year on the
waitlist
- Post-transplant survival: the expected number of days
lived during the first year after getting a transplant
- Transplant
benefit: the post-transplant survival measure minus the waitlist urgency
measure.
A child who is age 0 to 11 is
assigned priority for a transplant based upon how long he or she has been
waiting.
In addition to the criteria above, all lung transplant
recipients are chosen based on
blood type, tissue type, size of the organ, medical
urgency, time already spent on the waiting list, and the distance between the
donor and the recipient. More information can be found on the United Network
for Organ Sharing (UNOS) Web site: www.unos.org.
How Well It Works
- About half of the people who receive a lung
transplant survive at least 5 years after the procedure.2
- People with cystic fibrosis have the same survival rate after a
lung transplant as people who have lung transplants for other health
problems.
- Lung transplant is used only for people who have very
severe cystic fibrosis. For people who have mild or moderate cystic fibrosis,
the risks of the procedure are greater than the benefits.
Risks
The main risks of lung transplant are problems
during the surgery and rejection of the donated organs. Infection and rejection
of transplanted organs have similar symptoms, including fever, tiredness, and
trouble breathing.
After a lung transplant, preventive
antibiotic therapy starts right away.
Immunosuppressant medicines are also given, usually for the rest of your life.
Although immunosuppressant medicines raise the chances that your body will
accept the new lungs, they also make it harder for your body to fight off
infection.
What To Think About
- Lung transplant surgery does not prevent or
improve any problems that cystic fibrosis may be causing in other parts of your
body.
- Lung transplant surgery is generally recommended only for
people who have severe lung damage because the risks can be greater than the
benefits
- If you are a candidate for a lung transplant, you may have
to wait 6 months to 4 years. The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)
regularly updates its guidelines for transplant selection. For more
information, go to
www.unos.org/policiesandbylaws/policies.asp?resources=true.
- Having a lung transplant is still a limited option in the United
States and is usually available only in certain major medical centers. You may
have to travel or move to another city to have the operation.
Complete the surgery information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?) to help you prepare for this surgery.