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Senior Citizen Health & Medicine
Senior Citizen Lung Transplant Patients More Likely
to Survive
Study finds lung
transplant recipients age 60+ with major survival advantage
December 4, 2006 - Who is too old to receive a lung
transplant? There is no clear answer at this time. Nor was there a
clear answer when the guidelines for lung transplantation were written
in 1998. They were based on the best clinical data then available,
explains Dr. Philip W. Smith, a surgery resident and research fellow at
the University of Virginia Health System.
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Since lung transplantation (LTX) was first
performed in 1983, it has been a viable therapy for patients with
progressive end-stage lung disease. However, transplant centers have
found it necessary to adhere to patient age restrictions for LTX because
supplies of donor organs are scarce and mortality risks for the elderly
are high.
While they have risen in recent years, the
recommended age limits for LTX are now 60 for bilateral lung
transplantation (BLT) and 65 for single-lung transplantation (SLT).
These guidelines are based on the experience of academic institutions
such as UVa, which is among several centers now exploring if further
revisions are reasonable.
According to Smith, age restrictions are a pressing
issue for the medical community because the number of people age 60 and
older is growing rapidly, and this group will soon constitute a quarter
of the U.S. population.
Smith said that he and Dr. David R. Jones, surgical
director of UVas Lung Transplant Program, were concerned about
categorically excluding the elderly from receiving LTX. This concern
prompted the retrospective study we recently completed, Smith said.
Published last month in The Annals of Thoracic
Surgery, the study reviewed the outcomes of 182 LTX recipients treated
at UVa between 1995 and 2005. Of those patients, 52 (or 29 percent) were
between 60 and 69 years old. Sixteen patients (or 9 percent) were aged
65 or older.
Age is not an independent exclusion criterion at
our center, noted Jones. All patients undergo the same pre-transplant
evaluation to determine their eligibility. Our study shows that lung
transplantation can be performed with acceptable outcomes in patients
aged 60 and older, if the person is otherwise an appropriate candidate.
With the exception of recipient-age
recommendations, UVA follows the International Guidelines for the
Selection of Transplant Candidates in choosing LTX recipients.
Study findings showed that lung transplant
recipients age 60 and older have a major survival advantage at UVa
compared to patient data compiled by the United Network for Organ
Sharing (UNOS), a national registry that tracks outcomes at U.S.
transplantation centers.
Five-year survival rates of patients in this age
group were 54.7 percent at UVa and 38.6 percent in the UNOS database.
Researchers found that survival rates for UVas
younger LTX patients also exceeded those reported by UNOS. The five-year
survival rate for LTX patients under 60 was 61.0 percent at UVa and 49.8
percent among UNOS registrants.
The researchers attributed UVas results to several
factors. Our findings show that the quality of care provided during the
very early period following a lung transplant is key to long-term
success for elderly recipients. Weve established a multidisciplinary
team to ensure that optimal care is provided during this crucial time,
said Jones.
Another factor, noted Smith, is that UVa almost
exclusively performs SLT rather than BLT for recipients aged 60 and
older and we do so at a significantly higher rate than other
transplant centers. We believe that this is the most appropriate
procedure for the vast majority of these patients.
During the studys timeframe, only one elderly
patient at UVa received BLT rather than SLT.
The issue of which procedure yields the best
outcomes for older patients remains unresolved, Smith said.
Some centers are performing more BLT on older
patients and believe that to be the appropriate approach. At some point,
the collective experience, including this study, will be reviewed and
the guidelines will be adjusted accordingly.
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