The 2024 Lung Transplant Symposium: Surgical and Medical Insights for Transplant Assessment and Management, presented at the STS 2024 pre-conference convening on Friday, January 26. Approximately 100 surgeons, pulmonologists, anesthesiologists, and other transplant team members learned about best-practice approaches for surgical and medical care of lung transplant patients – from assessment as candidates though post-surgical care as recipients.
After a welcome and introduction by STS President Dr. Tom MacGillivray, Dr. Shaf Keshavjee of the Toronto Lung Transplant Program at the University Health Network, gave a brief overview of lung transplantation firsts and milestones before moving into present-day breakthroughs and areas of concern.
"Current noteworthy topics we’re addressing in lung transplantation include primary graft dysfunction, donor management, and organ repair centers, refining the transplant ecosystem, as well as understanding the challenges of retrieval and transport of organs," said Dr. Keshavjeee.
Five 90-minute sessions covered the following subject areas: recipient selection, donor selection, intraoperative management, postoperative management, and challenging situations led by expert panels who answered questions from attendees.
Among the wide range of presentations, the Symposium featured included, "ECMO as Bridge to Transplant;" "Organ Procurement Techniques -- DBD, DCD, or NRP;" "Perioperative and Intraoperative Anesthesia Management;" and "Diagnosis, Monitoring and Therapeutic Challenges," which each cited current research and case study results.