Transplants and Cystic Fibrosis
The success rate of lung transplantation for CF patients is encouraging: 70% survive one or two years after transplantation and the longest surviving patients had their transplant operations over 15 years ago. Like any other major surgery, transplants carry considerable risks and a transplant is appropriate only for a patient who is severely ill and has tried all other forms of conventional treatment. To these patients, lung transplantation offers a better quality of life.

There is a shortage of donor organs available for those awaiting transplants. If more people carry donor cards, then more lives can be saved in this way.
Transplantation doesn't remove all concern - the risk of rejection or infection still remains.
Anyone considering transplantation should consult doctors or counsellors at a local CF clinic. For more information about transplantation, you can download the CF Trust's factsheet from our publications library.
For more information, visit Transplants in Mind, who aim to help alleviate the plight of patients awaiting transplant by increasing organ donation.
Give the gift of life. Join the NHS Organ Donor Register.
Organ Donor Line 0845 60 60 400
Right now more than 8,000 people in the UK need an organ transplant that could save or improve their life, but each year around 400 people die while waiting for a transplant. If you want to help someone live after your death, sign up to the register now.
Find out more from UK Transplant and Live Life Then Give Life.


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