🫁 The Entry Ticket
- Goal: Improve survival & quality of life in end-stage, non-malignant lung disease.
- Core Principle: High risk of death within 2 years without transplant, but likely to survive >90 days to receive an organ.
- Key Indications:
- COPD (most common)
- Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF)
- Cystic Fibrosis (CF)
- Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH)
- General Criteria: Ambulatory, adequate nutrition, strong psychosocial support.
⭐ The Lung Allocation Score (LAS) prioritizes candidates, balancing waitlist urgency with post-transplant survival benefit.
🫁 Who Needs New Lungs?
Key indication: End-stage, non-malignant lung disease with a high risk of death (>50%) within 2 years despite maximal medical therapy.
- Obstructive Disease
- COPD: FEV₁ <20%; ↑PaCO₂ >50 mmHg; severe pulmonary HTN.
- Cystic Fibrosis: FEV₁ <30%; rapid decline; frequent exacerbations.
- Restrictive/Fibrotic Disease
- IPF: FVC <60%; DLCO <40%; O₂ requirement.
- Pulmonary Vascular Disease
- PAH: NYHA Class III/IV despite therapy.
⭐ The Lung Allocation Score (LAS) is a key metric, prioritizing candidates based on waitlist urgency and post-transplant survival benefit.
🩺 Diagnosis - The Green Light
-
Common Indications (End-Stage Disease):
- COPD (most frequent)
- Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF)
- Cystic Fibrosis (CF)
- Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH)
-
Candidate Evaluation Flow:
- 💡 Objective Referral Triggers:
- FEV1 < 30% (COPD, CF)
- FVC < 60% or DLCO < 50% (IPF)
- 6-Minute Walk Test < 350m with desaturation
⭐ The Lung Allocation Score (LAS), from 0-100, is crucial for prioritization. It balances waitlist urgency (risk of death without transplant) with the predicted post-transplant survival benefit. A higher LAS grants higher priority on the waitlist.
⏳ Management - The Waiting Game
- Prioritization: Waitlist ranking is determined by the Lung Allocation Score (LAS), a continuous scale from 0 to 100. A higher score indicates greater urgency and higher priority for organ offers.
- LAS Calculation: The score balances two key factors:
- Waitlist Urgency: Risk of death without a transplant.
- Post-Transplant Survival: Predicted 1-year survival benefit.
- Bridging Therapies: While awaiting a donor, patients are supported with O₂, pulmonary rehab, and potentially mechanical ventilation or ECMO.
⭐ The LAS system is dynamic; a patient's score is recalculated regularly based on changing clinical status, ensuring the sickest patients with the best potential benefit are prioritized.
🚧 Complications - Post-Op Hurdles
- Rejection:
- Acute: Lymphocytic infiltrates; treat with steroids.
- Chronic: Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome (BOS).
- Infection: High risk for opportunistic pathogens (CMV, Pneumocystis, Aspergillus).
- Surgical: Bronchial anastomotic dehiscence or stenosis.
- Drug Toxicity: Calcineurin inhibitor nephrotoxicity.
⭐ BOS is the leading cause of late mortality, presenting as irreversible airflow obstruction (↓FEV1).
⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Indicated for end-stage lung diseases (COPD, IPF, CF) with a prognosis < 2 years and no other options.
- Absolute contraindications include recent malignancy, untreatable multi-organ failure, and active substance abuse.
- Relative contraindications include age > 65, morbid obesity (BMI > 35), and severe osteoporosis.
- Non-adherence and poor psychosocial support are critical barriers to candidacy.
- The Lung Allocation Score (LAS) determines priority, balancing medical urgency with post-transplant survival benefit.
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