Living donor lung transplantation for end-stage lung disease

 
Guidance issued
 
IPG Number: IPG170

Summary

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has issued full guidance to the NHS in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland on living donor lung transplantation for end-stage lung disease.

As part of the NICE's work programme, the current guidance was considered for review in July 2009 but did not meet the review criteria as set out in the IP process guide. The guidance below therefore remains current.

Description

Having a lung transplant from living donors instead of from someone who has just died (a cadaveric donor) may be a possibility. Transplants from living donors may be an option for patients who cannot get one from someone who has died. It may also be a possibility for patients who are getting worse so quickly that they are likely to become too ill to have a transplant while they are waiting for a cadaveric donor.

A transplant from a living donor may also be an option for critically ill children because, for them, there is a particular shortage of suitable donors who have died.

A transplant from living donors usually involves three operations, one on each of two donors and one on the recipient. The lower lobe of the right lung is removed from one donor and the lower lobe of the left lung is removed from the other donor. Both lungs are then removed from the recipient and are replaced by the lung implants from the donors in a single operation.

For the operation on the recipient the doctor makes an opening in the chest. While the main procedure is being done the recipient?s circulation is connected to a heart-lung machine (cardiopulmonary bypass). This machine does the work of both the heart and the lungs, pumping the blood around the body and supplying it with oxygen. The doctor removes the diseased lungs and then implants the donated lobes one after the other.

NICE Pathways

This guidance has been incorporated into the following NICE Pathways, along with other related guidance and products.

Visit the NICE Pathway: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

OPCS4.6 Code(s):

For the donor:

X45.3 Donation of lobe of lung

Z94.2 Right sided operation or Z94.3 Left sided operation

For the recipient:

 

E53.8 Other specified transplantation of lung

Y99.2 Live related donor or Y99.3 Live unrelated donor

Y73.1 Cardiopulmonary bypass (if used)

Z94.2 Right sided operation or Z94.3 Left sided operation or Z94.1 Bilateral operation

The NHS Classifications Service of NHS Connecting for Health is the central definitive source for clinical coding guidance and determines the coding standards associated with the classifications (OPCS-4 and ICD-10) to be used across the NHS.   The NHS Classifications Service and NICE work collaboratively to ensure the most appropriate classification codes are provided.  www.connectingforhealth.co.uk/clinicalcoding

Details

Arrangement:
Special
Topic area:
Respiratory
Surgical procedures
Specialty:
Specialist advice sought from:
Date notified to NICE:
01 January 2100
Provisional consultation date:
January 2006
Guidance issue date:
24 May 2006

Contact details:

Contact NICE about this project
Technical lead
(for procedure specific enquiries or comments)
Contact Address:

Interventional Procedures Programme
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence
MidCity Place
71 High Holborn
London
WC1V 6NA

Links:

This page was last updated: 04 April 2011

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Selected, reliable information for health and social care in one place

Accessibility | Cymraeg | Freedom of information | Vision Impaired | Contact Us | Glossary | Data protection | Copyright | Disclaimer | Terms and conditions

Copyright @ 2012 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence. All rights reserved.