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Reuters
Reuters
Health
Sangmi Cha

South Korean COVID-19 patient recovering after double lung transplant

A former coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient who underwent lung transplant surgery, takes a remedial exercise at Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center in Anyang, South Korea, July 1, 2020. Picture taken July 1, 2020. Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center/Handout via REUTERS

After a record 112 days on a specialised life-support system, a South Korean COVID-19 patient is recovering from double lung transplant surgery, doctors say, in only the ninth such procedure worldwide since the coronavirus outbreak began.

The 50-year-old woman was diagnosed with the disease and hospitalised in late February and then spent 16 weeks on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support, which involves circulating a patient's blood through a machine that adds oxygen to red blood cells.

A combo picture shows comparison of normal lung and a damaged lung of a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient in this handout provided by Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center in Anyang, South Korea, June 22, 2020. Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center/Handout via REUTERS

That's the longest that any COVID-19 patient in the world has spent on ECMO support, her doctors said.

Various drugs such as the anti-malarial hydroxychloroquine, the HIV treatment Kaletra and steroids failed to stop her pulmonary fibrosis - scarring in the lungs - from worsening, said Dr Park Sung-hoon, professor of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Hallym University Sacred Heart Hospital.

That left few options other than a lung transplant.

A damaged lung of a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient is pictured at Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center in Anyang, South Korea, June 22, 2020. Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center/Handout via REUTERS

"The probability of success in lung transplants on ECMO patients is 50%, and fortunately, our patient was well prepared before the surgery when we found the donor," said Dr Kim Hyoung-soo, director of the hospital's ECMO programme, who was in charge of the surgery.

The patient declined to be identified or interviewed.

The doctors who conducted the eight-hour surgery described her destroyed lungs as hard like rock.

The ECMO machine is seen next to a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient at Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center in Anyang, South Korea, July 1, 2020. Picture taken July 1, 2020. Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center/Handout via REUTERS

She had an acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) when she came to hospital, Park said, and could not live without the ECMO machine's help.

ECMO is typically used on patients who need more help than ventilators can provide, and who are considered to have a 90% chance of dying. Half of patients recover in two to three weeks on ECMO, and a lung transplant is considered for those who don't, Kim said.

The surgery was the ninth after six similar surgeries in China, and one each in the United States and Australia, the hospital said.

A damaged lung of a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient is pictured at Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center in Anyang, South Korea, June 22, 2020. Picture taken June 22, 2020. Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital ECMO Center/Handout via REUTERS

Lung transplants are less common that other transplants in South Korea, with 92 of them in 2018, compared with 2,108 kidney and 176 heart transplants, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Lee Sun-hee, a head nurse of the ECMO programme who has cared for the patient since February, said the woman seemed to have a stronger-than-usual will to live, in part driven by being a mother of two.

"She told us, 'I'm grateful for the sunshine, for the moonlight. I'm so grateful that I am breathing'," Lee said.

Lee said the woman already knows the first thing she wants to do when released from the hospital:

"To get a nice bath."

Doctors said she would be discharged when her chest muscles are strong enough to support her breathing.

(Reporting by Sangmi Cha, additional reporting by Cheyoun Won; Editing by Josh Smith and Robert Birsel)

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