Single lung transplantation with cyclosporin immunosuppression. Evaluation of canine and human recipients.

1983 
Cyclosporin, a potent new immunosuppressive agent, was used (alone or in combination with other drugs) in 28 canine single lung allograft recipients. Mean recipient survival with good allograft function was 155 days with cyclosporin and far exceeded that obtained in previous single lung allograft recipients treated with standard immunosuppression (15 to 22 days). The results of these experiments were as follows: (1) 20% of the recipient animals exhibited no evidence of rejection whatsoever; (2) four of 28 animals survived more than 350 days with good allograft function; (3) 79% of the animals exhibited some evidence of rejection that was easily reversed in 74% of instances with corticosteroids; (4) 10 of 28 animals exhibited good lung allograft function 5 months or more after operation; (5) in cyclosporin-treated lung allograft recipients, rejection was diagnosed by the presence of infiltrate on chest roentgenogram, analysis of the cellular content of bronchoalveolar lavage samples, and decreased perfusion on 99mtechnetium lung scan; (6) complete healing without stenosis of the bronchial anastomosis occurred in 82% of the animals studied. One of two patients treated with cyclosporin after undergoing single lung allografting survived 7 weeks after transplantation and 4 weeks after contralateral pneumonectomy. Episodes of rejection were reversible, and the bronchial anastomosis healed normally. This overall experience indicates that cyclosporin, although not a perfect immunosuppressive agent, increases the likelihood of success with therapeutic single lung transplantation.
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