A 10-year-old cystic fibrosis sufferer is recovering at a Philadelphia hospital yesterday after receiving a set of adult organs.
Sarah Murnaghan's family went to court to fight a rule preventing her from accessing a list of adult lung donors, triggering a national debate about the regime governing transplants for children. Doctors operated on her for six hours, transplanting adult lungs on Thursday, after a court ruling gave her access to a broader pool of donors.
Under the rules governing transplants involving children under 12, Sarah would have been made to wait for paediatric lungs. Adult lungs would only have been offered after patients older than 12 had declined them. Lungs from adults either have to be trimmed to fit the smaller frame of a child, or just a smaller part of the organ, the lobe, is transplanted.
Her aunt, Sharon Ruddock, credited US District Judge Michael Baylson's ruling on June 5 with clearing the hurdles for the surgery. It was a direct result of the ruling that allowed Sarah to be put on the adult list, she said. She would never have got these lungs otherwise.