Publications by authors named "Kieran Halloran"

Mucosal or endobronchial biopsies (EBB) are typically used in the diagnosis of directly visualized bronchial lesions, infection, and sarcoidosis, but their utility in the evaluation of lung transplant recipients is controversial. EBB represents an attractive alternative to transbronchial biopsy (TBB): EBB provides straightforward sampling of airway pathology with decreased complication rates due to minimal and visualizable bleeding and the elimination of pneumothorax risk. In lung transplant recipients, EBB may be obtained when TBB is too high-risk, including in the setting of acute lung allograft dysfunction (ALAD) requiring mechanical ventilation or in advanced chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD).

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Introduction: Short-term clinical outcomes from SARS-CoV-2 infection are generally favorable. However, 15-20% of patients report persistent symptoms of at least 12 weeks duration, often referred to as long COVID. Population studies have also demonstrated an increased risk of incident diabetes and cardiovascular disease at 12 months following infection.

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Purpose Of Review: Lung transplantation (LTX) has transformed care for people with cystic fibrosis (pwCF) suffering from advanced cystic fibrosis lung disease (ACFLD), and it has evolved into an accepted therapy for patients with ACFLD across all ages. We review cystic fibrosis as a major indication for LTX, particularly highlighting outcomes including survival, a changing landscape over time, and factors affecting sequelae following LTX in cystic fibrosis.

Recent Findings: Although some populations such as those undergoing lung retransplantation exhibit inferior posttransplant outcomes, LTX for pwCF provides an excellent long-term survival that has significantly improved over time, likely due to specialized cystic fibrosis center care and recognition of common comorbidities in pwCF post-LTX.

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Background: Metabolic complications post-lung transplant are poorly understood and little is known about how these complications differ between patients with or without cystic fibrosis (pwCF and pwoCF). This study compared post-lung transplant outcomes between pwCF and pwoCF relating to survival and incidence of diabetes, dyslipidaemia, hypertension, and renal impairment.

Methods: A retrospective (2004-2017) case-control study involving 90 pwCF and 90 pwoCF (age, sex and year of transplant matched) was conducted.

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Introduction: Respiratory viral infections (RVI) in lung transplant recipients (LTR) have variably been associated with rejection and chronic lung allograft dysfunction. Our center has used systemic corticosteroids to treat outpatient RVI in some cases, but evidence is limited. We reviewed all adult LTR diagnosed with outpatient RVI January 2017 to December 2019.

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Article Synopsis
  • Lung transplantation experiences antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) less frequently than other organs, and previous research did not identify molecular AMR in lung biopsies.
  • New findings indicate that AMR in kidney transplants can occur without donor-specific antibodies (DSA), linked to natural killer (NK) cell activity, prompting researchers to investigate a similar scenario in lung biopsies.
  • The study identified a molecular rejection-like state (NKRL) in lung transplants characterized by increased NK cell transcripts, differentiating it from traditional T cell-mediated rejection, while highlighting that NKRL often goes unrecognized clinically and doesn't correlate with negative outcomes like chronic lung dysfunction.
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Background: Pulmonary blood flow can be assessed on ventilation-perfusion (VQ) scan with relative lung perfusion, with a 55% to 45% (or 10%) right-to-left differential considered normal. We hypothesized that wide perfusion differential on routine VQ studies at 3 mo posttransplant would be associated with an increased risk of death or retransplantation, chronic lung allograft (CLAD), and baseline lung allograft dysfunction.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study on all patients who underwent double-lung transplant in our program between 2005 and 2016, identifying patients with a wide perfusion differential of >10% on a 3-mo VQ scan.

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Background: Donor-specific antibodies (DSAs) have been associated with antibody-mediated rejection, chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD), and increased mortality in lung transplant recipients. Our center performs transplants in the presence of DSA, and we sought to evaluate the safety of this practice with respect to graft loss, CLAD onset, and primary graft dysfunction (PGD).

Methods: We reviewed recipients transplanted from 2010 to 2017, classifying them as DSA positive (DSA + ) or negative.

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Background: Hyperammonemia syndrome (HS) is a rare post-transplant complication associated with high morbidity and mortality. Its incidence appears to be higher in lung transplant recipients and its pathophysiology is not well understood. In addition to underlying metabolic abnormalities, it is postulated that HS may be associated with Ureaplasma or Mycoplasma spp.

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Lung transplantion (LTx) recipients have low long-term survival and a high incidence of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS), an inflammation of the small airways in chronic rejection of a lung allograft. There is great clinical need for a minimally invasive biomarker of BOS. Here, 644 different proteins were analyzed to detect biomarkers that distinguish BOS grade 0 from grades 1-3.

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Background: At least 20% of lung transplant recipients will be diagnosed with a malignancy within 5 years of transplant. Transplant candidates with a history of pre-transplant malignancy must meet remission criteria before listing to minimize the risk of recurrence, however these patients may have an intrinsic predisposition to developing subsequent cancers which can be amplified by immunosuppression. We assessed whether pre-transplant malignancy was associated with an increased risk of developing malignancy of any type after lung transplant.

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Background: Incidental pulmonary embolism (PE) is a challenging entity with unclear treatment implications. Our program performs routine ventilation-perfusion (VQ) scans at 3-months post-transplant to establish airway and vascular function. We sought to determine the prevalence and prognostic implications of mismatched perfusion defects (MMPD) found on these studies, hypothesizing they would be associated with a benign prognosis.

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Transplanted lungs suffer worse outcomes than other organ transplants with many developing chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD), diagnosed by physiologic changes. Histology of transbronchial biopsies (TBB) yields little insight, and the molecular basis of CLAD is not defined. We hypothesized that gene expression in TBBs would reveal the nature of CLAD and distinguish CLAD from changes due simply to time posttransplant.

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We report a case of a 43-year-old woman who underwent double lung transplantation from a donor with severe airway burns following a house fire. The recipient's lung function and quality of life remain excellent 24 months following transplantation. This case is the first to report successful long-term outcomes in transplantation of lungs affected by smoke inhalation.

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Background: Primary graft dysfunction (PGD) after lung transplantation has previously been associated with increased risk of death and chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD), but the relationship to baseline lung allograft dysfunction (BLAD), where graft function fails to normalize, is not known.

Methods: We reviewed all double lung transplant recipients transplanted in our program 2004-2016. We defined PGD and CLAD as per recent consensus definitions and BLAD as failure to achieve both FEV1 and FVC ≥80% predicted on 2 consecutive tests ≥3 weeks apart.

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A 34-year-old previously healthy man of Korean descent (height, 174 cm; weight, 47.4 kg) demonstrated dyspnea with cough and chest tightness. The patient had no relevant occupational exposures and no history of illicit drug or tobacco use.

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Background: Primary graft dysfunction (PGD) is an important contributor to early mortality in lung transplant recipients and is associated with impaired lung function. The radiographic sequelae of PGD on computed tomography (CT) have not been characterized.

Methods: We studied adult double lung transplant recipients from 2010 to 2016 for whom protocol 3-month post-transplant CT scans were available.

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Objective: COPA syndrome is a genetic disorder of retrograde cis-Golgi vesicle transport that leads to upregulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines (mainly IL-1β and IL-6) and the development of interstitial lung disease (ILD). The impact of COPA syndrome on post-lung transplant (LTx) outcome is unknown but potentially detrimental. In this case report, we describe progressive allograft dysfunction following LTx for COPA-ILD.

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