Doctors perform the first “COVID to COVID” lung transplant successfully

Northwestern Medicine surgeons in Chicago have performed the first lung transplant on an American survivor of COVID-19 using the lungs of another person who has recovered from the disease.

According to the hospital, the recipient, a 60-year-old health worker from Illinois, received life support after being diagnosed with COVID in May. He was moved to the Northwest and spent a week on the transplant list before coinciding with the donor, who recovered from the disease before dying from other causes.

Surgeons performed the transplant in February and announced it this week.

“This is a milestone for lung transplantation,” said Ankit Bharat, head of thoracic surgery and surgical director of the Northwestern Medicine Lung Transplant Program, noting that many of the 30 million Americans who have had COVID-19 are registered donor bodies.

“If we tell them‘ no ’just because they had COVID-19 in the past, we will drastically reduce the donor set and there is already a huge demand and supply gap,” he said.

Recently, surgeons began performing lung transplants on patients with COVID, which worried that increased demand would lead to a lack of available organs. The waiting list for lung transplants in the US hovers around 1,000, with a mortality rate of about 10%.

In January, Northwestern told The Daily Beast that it had received twice as many transplant requests as it usually receives in a given year, and other hospitals said they received several requests a week. At the time, Bharat and other transplant surgeons said it was crucial to expand the donor reserve to meet rising demand.

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