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Published in: General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 4/2013

01-04-2013 | Registry Report

Registry of the Japanese society of lung and heart–lung transplantation: the official Japanese lung transplantation report 2012

Authors: Takahiro Oto, Yoshinori Okada, Toru Bando, Masato Minami, Takeshi Shiraishi, Takeshi Nagayasu, Masayuki Chida, Meinoshin Okumura, Hiroshi Date, Shinichiro Miyoshi, Takashi Kondo, The Japanese Society of Lung and Heart–Lung Transplantation

Published in: General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | Issue 4/2013

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Abstract

The Japanese Organ Transplant Law was amended, and the revised law took effect in July 2010 to overcome extreme donor shortage and to increase the availability of donor organs from brain-dead donors. It is now possible to procure organs from children. The year 2011 was the first year that it was possible to examine the results of this first extensive revision of the Japanese Organ Transplant Law, which took effect in 1997. Currently, seven transplant centers, including Tohoku, Dokkyo, Kyoto, Osaka, Okayama, Fukuoka and Nagasaki Universities, are authorized to perform lung transplantation in Japan, and by the end of 2011, a total of 239 lung transplants had been performed. The number of transplants per year and the ratio of brain-dead donor transplants increased dramatically after the revision of the Japanese Organ Transplant Law. The survival rates for lung transplant recipients registered with the Japanese Society for Lung and Heart–lung Transplantation were 93.3 % at 1 month, 91.5 % at 3 months, 86.3 % at 1 year, 79.0 % at 3 years, and 73.1 % at 5 years. The survival curves for brain-dead donor and living-donor lung transplantation were similar. The survival outcomes for both brain-dead and living-donor lung transplants were better than those reported by the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation. However, donor shortage remains a limitation of lung transplantation in Japan. The lung transplant centers in Japan should continue to make a special effort to save critically ill patients waiting for lung transplantation.
Literature
1.
go back to reference Christie JD, Edwards LB, Kucheryavaya AY, et al. The Registry of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation: twenty-eighth Adult Lung and Heart-Lung Transplant Report-2011. J Heart Lung Trans. 2011;30:1104–22.CrossRef Christie JD, Edwards LB, Kucheryavaya AY, et al. The Registry of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation: twenty-eighth Adult Lung and Heart-Lung Transplant Report-2011. J Heart Lung Trans. 2011;30:1104–22.CrossRef
Metadata
Title
Registry of the Japanese society of lung and heart–lung transplantation: the official Japanese lung transplantation report 2012
Authors
Takahiro Oto
Yoshinori Okada
Toru Bando
Masato Minami
Takeshi Shiraishi
Takeshi Nagayasu
Masayuki Chida
Meinoshin Okumura
Hiroshi Date
Shinichiro Miyoshi
Takashi Kondo
The Japanese Society of Lung and Heart–Lung Transplantation
Publication date
01-04-2013
Publisher
Springer Japan
Published in
General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery / Issue 4/2013
Print ISSN: 1863-6705
Electronic ISSN: 1863-6713
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11748-013-0215-7

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