London, Dec 28: Jennifer Wederell, a 27-year-old British woman with cystic fibrosis,
died of lung cancer after she received the lungs of a heavy smoker in an organ
transplant.
According to BBC News, Wederell had been on the waiting list
for a lung transplant for 18 months when in April 2011, she was told there was
finally a match. She received the transplant, apparently not knowing the donor
had been a smoker. In February 2012 a malignant mass was found in her lungs. She
died less than 16 months after the transplant.
Her father, Colin
Grannell, said he believed his daughter had died a death meant for someone else.
"The shock immediately turned to anger insofar as all the risks were explained
in the hour before her transplant," he told the BBC, "and not once was the fact
smoker's lungs would be used mentioned."
Wederell's case raises difficult
issues regarding organ transplants. She was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis, a
progressive and debilitating lung disease that affects more than 70,000 people
worldwide, at the age of two. By her mid-20s, she relied on an oxygen tank 24
hours a day to survive.
Would she have been better off refusing the
transplant, and hoping another set of organs became available that matched her
blood type and came from a non-smoker?
"Probably not," said Dr. G.
Alexander Patterson, surgical director of lung transplants at the Washington
University and Barnes-Jewish transplant center in St. Louis, one of the largest
organ transplant programs in the nation. "If she was critically ill and had poor
chance of short-term survival, she was better off accepting the
transplant."
Patterson said most hospitals, including those in the U.S.,
also transplant the lungs of smokers if they are of otherwise good
quality.
"This is a necessity because there are far fewer donors than
there are recipients and most patients who are on a waiting list would gladly
accept a set of smoker's lungs in exchange for the ones they have, which usually
have little chance of carrying them through to long-term
survival."
Patterson said that his program would be likely to turn down
an organ from a donor if smoking history was too extreme -- say, three packs a
day for twenty years -- or if the donor had been known to engage in other risky
lifestyle behaviors such as unprotected sex with multiple partners or
intravenous drug use. Even those organs might still be used as part of an
"extended criteria" donation, which utilizes organs that don't meet the usual
criteria for transplant, but are still healthy enough for a successful procedure
if a patient needs it quickly.
About 17,000 Americans receive a
transplant each year, and more than 4,600 die waiting for one, according to
United Network for Organ Sharing, the organization charged with allocating the
nation's organs. If surgeons do not accept less-than-perfect organs, Patterson
said that the numbers might be much worse.
Harefield Hospital in London,
where Wederell was treated, has since apologized to her family for not revealing
all the information about her donor's medical history. But Patterson said most
transplant surgeons don't share details about the smoking history of the donor
with their patients unless they are asked directly.
Arthur Caplan,
director of the division of medical ethics at NYU Langone Medical Center in New
York City said he believed this was a mistake.
"They absolutely should
have told her. When you have reasons to think a donor organ is suboptimal in
some way, you must disclose it and allow a person to make their own decision.
People have to know the risks they face," Caplan said.
Caplin said he
thought surgeons might not review such risks in order to avoid having a
difficult conversation -- and they may sometimes also feel they are the experts
who know what is best for the patient.
"They should do it anyway.
Reasonable people can deal with major sources of risk and are exceedingly
unlikely to say no to a donation anyway because waiting lists are long and they
know they might not get another donation in time," he said.
Patterson
said that he understood why Wederell's family was upset, but that it's
impossible to know why she developed cancer. Lung transplant recipients receive
a great deal more immunosuppressant therapy than other organ recipients to stop
the body from rejecting the organ. This may have encouraged the cancer to
grow.
"It's plausible that she would have succumbed to some type of
cancer no matter what, but there's no way to know for sure," Patterson said.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Woman dies after receiving smoker's lungs in transplant
Woman dies after receiving smoker's lungs in transplant
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