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Breathing
Life into Injured Lungs: World-First
technique expands Donor Pool
Newswise
— For the first time in the world,
transplant surgeons at Toronto General
Hospital, University Health Network used a
new technique to repair an injured donor
lung that was unsuitable for transplant, and
then successfully transplanted it into a
patient.
The use of this technique could
significantly expand the lung donor organ
pool and improve outcomes after
transplantation.
In their ground-breaking research, a team of
lung transplant surgeons led by Dr. Shaf
Keshavjee in the Lung Transplant Program at
Toronto General Hospital (TGH) developed an
“ex vivo” or outside the body technique
capable of continuously perfusing or pumping
a bloodless solution containing oxygen,
proteins and nutrients into injured donor
lungs.
This technique, the Toronto XVIVO Lung
Perfusion System, allows the surgeons the
opportunity to assess and treat injured
donor lungs, while they are outside the
body, to make them suitable for
transplantation.
Unlike current cooling lung preservation
techniques which inhibit cell metabolism and
the possibility of any active repair
processes prior to transplantation, the
Toronto technique maintains donor lungs at a
normal body temperature of 37 degrees
Celsius, allowing for future organ repair
and gene and cell therapy strategies to be
used on them.
Although lung perfusion systems have been
used in Sweden and England, these systems
were blood-based, short-term assessment
strategies which were not capable of
long-term maintenance or techniques to
repair or recondition the lungs.
The Toronto System was used on donor lungs
for Andy Dykstra, 56, who received his
transplant on December 5, 2008. He had been
waiting for a transplant since July 30,
2008, and was told of the clinical trial
testing the new system on December 4, 2008.
Recalling his difficulty breathing when
walking to the front door in his home, Andy
said that he waited only two seconds before
deciding to be the first patient to receive
the reconditioned lungs, which would not
have been suitable for transplant without
undergoing perfusion by the Toronto System.
“When I was given this chance, the hair on
my arms stood up, I was so excited. I knew
it was right. I just had to go for it,” he
said, with his wife Chris standing by his
side and nodding for emphasis.
Andy is part of an ongoing clinical trial
which uses the novel Toronto strategy to
identify donor lungs which do not meet
current transplant criteria, repair them,
and then transplant them into patients.
To date, four patients in total have
received lungs treated using this technique,
and all have done well.
But Andy was the first patient who received
lungs which did not meet standard transplant
criteria and which could not have been used
if they had not been repaired first by the
Toronto System. (The three others received
donor lungs which met transplant criteria
and which were further improved by the
Toronto System.)
All TGH patients waiting for a lung
transplant are eligible to be part of this
clinical trial, and the lung transplant team
will assess all those who are interested.
“We are extremely pleased that Andy is doing
so well,” said Dr. Keshavjee who is Director
of the Lung Transplant Program at TGH,
Senior Scientist, The McEwen Centre for
Regenerative Medicine, Director, Latner
Thoracic Research Laboratories, and
Professor and Chair, Division of Thoracic
Surgery, University of Toronto, adding that
Andy was able to breathe without any
mechanical assistance just four days after
the transplant and was discharged from
hospital 12 days after the procedure.
“This achievement was the result of years of
research and pre-clinical planning by a
large team of researchers, surgeons,
physicians, nurses and other specialists.
It means that many more donor lungs which we
could not have used before can now
potentially be used safely, and it sets the
stage for more sophisticated molecular and
cellular repair techniques to be applied in
the Toronto XVIVO Perfusion System so that
transplant outcomes can be further improved.
The potential exists to immunologically
pre-prepare the organ before it even sees
the recipient’s immune system.”
He explained that currently only about
15%-20% of donor lungs are acceptable for
transplantation since lungs are susceptible
to injuries during the brain-death process
or from intensive care unit-related lung
complications.
These numbers can easily be doubled with
this technique to treat and improve donor
lungs.
Dr. Marcelo Cypel, a transplant surgical
fellow at TGH, echoed Dr. Keshavjee’s
sentiments.
“This new technique heralds the beginning of
a new era in transplantation since it has
allowed us to progress from preserving donor
lungs to actually being able to repair some
of the injury before transplantation. And we
have done this using a unique strategy on
donor lungs outside the body.”
After the donor lungs are removed from a
deceased donor and taken to the hospital,
they are carefully transferred to a
protective, transparent bubble-like chamber
that the Toronto team developed in
collaboration with Vitrolife, a company
specializing in developing lung preservation
solutions
To avoid injuring the lungs, a series of
precise steps are followed when connecting
them to a circuit composed of a pump,
ventilator and filters through which flow
oxygen, nutrients and a special solution.
The temperature is incrementally increased
until it reaches 37 degrees Celsius over
about 30 minutes, and ventilation of the
lungs is begun during that time. Lung
function is evaluated regularly on key
indicators, such as how easily the lungs can
exchange oxygen, airway pressure and lung
compliance.
Previously published research by Drs.
Keshavjee and Cypel on this system (December
2008 issue of the Journal of Heart and Lung
Transplantation) has shown that lungs can be
safely kept on this circuit for 12 hours in
order to assess, maintain and treat them
before successfully transplanting them.
Currently, about 80 patients are waiting for
either a lung or heart-lung transplant in
Ontario. About 20% of those on the wait list
will die before they receive a lung
transplant.
In Canada, the number of people waiting for
a lung transplant has doubled in the past 10
years, with 252 Canadians waiting to receive
a lung transplant in 2006, compared to 119
in 1997. Two hundred and ninety-nine (299)
Canadians died while waiting for a lung
transplant between 1997 and 2006.
The clinical trial is funded by Vitrolife
Inc. and is approved by the Research Ethics
Board of University Health Network.
About Toronto General Hospital, University
Health Network
Toronto General Hospital is a partner in the
University Health Network, along with the
Toronto Western Hospital and the Princess
Margaret Hospital. These teaching hospitals
are affiliated with the University of
Toronto.
Toronto General Hospital is a national and
international source for research, education
and patient care, and is recognized
internationally for its innovations in
transplantation, surgical innovation,
infectious diseases, diabetes and genomic
medicine.
The lung transplant program is one of the
largest in the world, performing about 100
transplants a year. It is renowned worldwide
for its innovation and comprehensiveness in
treating patients with severe and complex
lung diseases.
A pioneer in research on how best to
preserve fragile lungs, the program is
currently developing new molecular
diagnostic and treatment strategies to
repair and improve the quality of donor
lungs, which could increase the number of
transplants performed and survival after
transplant.
About the McEwen Centre for Regenerative
Medicine
The McEwen Centre for Regenerative Medicine
was established in 2003. Its mission is to
be a catalyst for regenerative medicine by
facilitating collaboration and promoting
research and awareness in the field.
The McEwen Centre’s ultimate goal is to
accelerate the development of better and
more effective treatments for
life-threatening conditions such as heart
disease, diabetes, respiratory disease and
spinal cord injury.
The McEwen Centre for Regenerative Medicine
is fully affiliated with University Health
Network.
About University of Toronto
Established in 1827, the University of
Toronto is Canada's largest and most
influential university with almost 12,000
faculty and staff working at three campuses
and ten academic hospitals in the Toronto
region.
Our world-leading scholars teach more than
60,000 students in 841 distinct
undergraduate programs as well as 520
graduate and 42 professional programs.
According to Thomson ISI data, U of T
faculty also publish more research than any
other publicly-funded university in North
America.
And with over 400,000 alumni in more than
130 countries around the world, U of T is
truly global in reach and impact.
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