Pulmonary bipartitioning and lobar transplantation: A new approach to donor organ shortage,☆☆,,★★

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Abstract

The scarcity of small donors has significantly limited lung transplantation for pediatric and small adult patients. Use of single lobes procured from size-unmatched donors has overcome this difficulty, but only in a few selected cases and, in addition, it represents a waste of lung tissue. In an animal model we have shown that it is possible to divide one lung with careful partitioning of the vascular and bronchial structures and thus obtain two viable lobar grafts suitable for bilateral implantation in a smaller animal. We have now applied this procedure clinically in seven patients operated on between May 1993 and November 1994. The indications were cystic fibrosis in three children, primary pulmonary hypertension in two adults, bronchiectasis in one, and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis in one. There were three children aged 13 to 17 years (median 14) and four adults aged 40 to 53 years (median 45). There was a 46% to 50% discrepancy for weight between recipient and donor and a 12% to 17% discrepancy for height. The surgical technique consisted of careful partitioning of the left donor lung, bilateral anterior thoracotomy in the recipient, and, with the use of cardiopulmonary bypass, implantation of the lower lobe in the left hemithorax and the upper lobe in the right hemithorax. Vascular and bronchial connections were facilitated by leaving a long pedicle on the recipient side. The pulmonary artery anastomosis for the donor left upper lobe was done with the “fissure” side of the artery to ensure an anastomosis without tension. An end-to-end bronchial anastomosis overcame the problem of size discrepancy. Six patients are alive and well 10 to 27 months (median 19) after operation. One patient with cystic fibrosis died of systemic aspergillosis infection. All were discharged from the hospital within the first or second postoperative month. No technical problems were identified: repeated bronchoscopy has demonstrated satisfactory healing without early stricture formation. All patients remain well subjectively with good exercise tolerance and all patients achieve greater than 70% of predicted values of forced expiratory volume in 1 second. Perfect adaptation of the transplanted lobes to the recipient pleural space has been demonstrated by postoperative computed tomographic scan. In conclusion, bilateral lobar transplantation from a single donor lung is possible in small adults or children when there is a large size discrepancy with the donor. This may help resolve the problem of donor availability in the pediatric population. (J Thorac Cardiovac Surg 1997;113:529-37)

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From the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery,a Broussais Hospital, Paris, and the Hôtel Dieu Hospital,b Paris, France.

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Read at the Seventy-fourth Annual Meeting of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery, New York, N.Y., April 24-27, 1994.

Address for reprints: Jean-Paul A. Couetil, MD, Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Broussais Hospital, 96, Rue Didot, 75014 Paris, France.

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