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1 aneous coronary intervention; or heart/heart-lung transplant).
2 ry T, NK, and NKT-like lymphocytes following lung transplant.
3 tions and no effective therapies, aside from lung transplant.
4 ended intensive care including the option of lung transplant.
5 or clinical outcomes, particularly following lung transplant.
6 esource use during index hospitalization for lung transplant.
7 increased risk of delisting or death before lung transplant.
8 r and how lymphatic anastomosis occurs after lung transplant.
9 dity and mortality among patients undergoing lung transplant.
10 ad positive donor BAL testing at the time of lung transplant.
11 is common during the initial 3 months after lung transplant.
12 y and is useful for graft monitoring after a lung transplant.
13 nt presenting with a lung mass 3 years after lung transplant.
14 esent at intermediate frequencies before the lung transplants.
15 d early improvement in PFR and proportion of lungs transplanted.
16 urvival probability between LLT and isolated lung transplant (1 y, 89.5% vs 86.7%; 5 y, 67.0% vs 64.6
17 70-year-old man who underwent a single right lung transplant 103 days after transcatheter aortic valv
19 t; 58 (17.6%), heart transplant; 54 (16.4%), lung transplant; 34 (10.3%), liver transplant; and 6 (1.
20 was a 66-year-old man who underwent a double lung transplant 56 days after transcatheter aortic valve
21 cipient serum ferritin >500 ug/L), and for a lung transplant 6.3 (Burkholderia cepacia complex infect
22 years; heart transplant, 269,715 life-years; lung transplant, 64,575 life-years; pancreas-kidney tran
23 e screening tests in donor and candidate pre-lung transplant, 8.3% (n = 5) of recipients had positive
24 neumonia (aHR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.3-2.3), single lung transplant (aHR, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.0-1.7), and idiopat
25 cause of early morbidity and mortality after lung transplant and is characterized by severe hypoxemia
26 change in mean total hospital charges among lung transplant and other solid-organ transplant recipie
27 sed in proinflammatory lymphocytes following lung transplant and that treatment with SIRT1 activators
30 e might prove highly valuable for evaluating lung transplants and lung resections, and could improve
31 o effective treatments for ACDMPV other than lung transplant, and new therapeutic approaches are urge
35 ur, but also introduces the mouse orthotopic lung transplant as a model for studying the immunobiolog
37 plant Outcomes Group who underwent bilateral lung transplant at our institution between 2004 and 2014
39 rvival were estimated among adults receiving lung transplants between June 2010 and June 2015 based o
40 rejection is emerging in kidney, heart, and lung transplant biopsies and could offer insights for li
43 ortic valve replacement may favorably impact lung transplant candidacy for patients with end-stage lu
44 n response to a lawsuit from a New York City lung transplant candidate, an emergency change to the lu
46 Coronary artery disease (CAD) is common in lung transplant candidates and may require revasculariza
48 tionship between pretransplant opioid use in lung transplant candidates and retransplant-free surviva
51 We performed an ecologic study of 12 187 lung transplant candidates listed at 56 U.S. lung transp
53 it-list and post-transplant mortality for CF lung transplant candidates using a novel database and to
58 s typically considered the primary metric of lung transplant center performance in the United States.
63 inal organs by means of EVLP with a standard lung transplant cohort through a multicenter open trial.
64 ncidence of AR in a contemporary multicenter lung transplant cohort undergoing consistent biopsy samp
65 ransplant year in a present-day, five-center lung transplant cohort.Methods: We analyzed prospective
67 r liver transplants and 3.07, 1.96-4.81, for lung transplants, compared with kidney transplants), and
69 ymphatic connections are reestablished after lung transplant, despite evidence suggesting that this d
70 Endothelial glycocalyx breakdown occurs in lung transplant donors and recipients and predicts organ
71 median, 29.6 y) received bilateral deceased lung transplants for pulmonary chronic GVHD between 2002
72 ithout HCV infection who received a heart or lung transplant from donors with hepatitis C viremia, tr
73 ts than in a cohort of patients who received lung transplants from donors who did not have HCV infect
76 ations, an intervention was necessary in the lung transplant group compared to 32% (n = 79/245) in th
81 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.89-0.97) and lung transplant (HR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.84-0.97) but not ki
82 erience with constrictive pericarditis after lung transplant in an effort to investigate the cause an
84 with experience of performing more than 170 lung transplants in the first 5 years of the lung alloca
85 All recipients of kidney, liver, heart, and lung transplants in the United Kingdom between 1987 and
87 er case of synchronous CRC arising in a post-lung transplant individual with CF within the recommende
88 tween C57BL/6J and DBA/2J) (Haplotype H2b/d) lungs transplanted into DBA/2J (H2d) recipients were ide
91 miR-16 and miR-195 levels were also noted in lung transplant (LTx) patients with DSA compared with LT
92 ated hemoglobin [HbA1c]) and survival in all lung transplant (LTx) recipients and those with either p
93 humidified high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) in lung transplant (LTx) recipients readmitted to intensive
96 ablation of lymphatic endothelial cells in a lung transplant model revealeded that loss of lymphatic
97 tibility complex-mismatched mouse orthotopic lung transplant model, we investigated a conditioning re
99 tibility complex-mismatch murine cardiac and lung transplant models, and in a humanized skin transpla
100 accelerates tissue damage and increases post-lung transplant mortality in cystic fibrosis patients.
102 ) but did not differentially increase single lung transplants or pretransplant ECMO utilization.
103 efined as time to death, acute exacerbation, lung transplant, or decrease in forced vital capacity (F
104 mary outcome was time to death (all causes), lung transplant, or first nonelective hospital admission
105 nt and the composite rates for death, double-lung transplant, or restenosis at 36 months were 5% and
107 objective of this study was to examine early lung transplant outcomes following EVLP using a large na
109 etrospective cohort study of patients in the Lung Transplant Outcomes Group who underwent bilateral l
112 treatment phase viral kinetics (P = 0.005), lung transplant (P = 0.002), CMV donor (D)+/recipient (R
114 tection rates at 40 HAU (95% healthy and 97% lung transplant; P = 1.0) and at 160 HAU (24% healthy an
117 ells from patients with BOS (n = 10), stable lung transplant patients (n = 11), and healthy aged-matc
118 cted from patients with BOS (n = 10), stable lung transplant patients (n = 18), and healthy aged-matc
119 lected from patients with BOS (n=10), stable lung transplant patients (n=18) and healthy aged-matched
120 uggest that MMF is present in the airways of lung transplant patients and might affect the structural
121 lence of PTMS but also identifies kidney and lung transplant patients as being at a particularly high
123 ected in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of lung transplant patients diagnosed with IA that received
124 e center, retrospective case series study of lung transplant patients followed by the Columbia Lung T
126 Thirty-six of 71 (51%) phase 1 cases were lung transplant patients with positive respiratory cultu
137 transplant patients followed by the Columbia Lung Transplant program who tested positive for SARS-CoV
140 nt, voluntary, web-based survey of heart and lung transplant providers to assess current practice pat
142 ifferences in eventual outcomes in liver and lung transplant, providing useful information to patient
144 Longitudinal posttransplant monitoring of a lung transplant recipient (A2, CMV seropositive) who rec
146 omonas isolates and airway samples from a CF-lung transplant recipient during two years, and followed
150 thod to sequencing of cfDNA in the plasma of lung transplant recipients (40 samples, six patients).
151 ssociated with treatment among the colonized lung transplant recipients (8/12 [67%] vs 3/25 [12%] who
152 s not associated with increased mortality in lung transplant recipients (9/43 [20.9%] in infected die
153 n (CLAD) is the major outcome limitation for lung transplant recipients (LTR) after the first year, a
154 spiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection in lung transplant recipients (LTRs) causes mortality rates
155 ACR) in the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) of lung transplant recipients (LTRs) to determine the assoc
164 V) replication and disease commonly occur in lung transplant recipients after stopping anti-CMV proph
165 center retrospective cohort study of primary lung transplant recipients and examined risk factors for
166 MV infection in 23 (donor+/recipient-; D+R-) lung transplant recipients and found rapid induction of
167 y artery disease has a high prevalence among lung transplant recipients and has historically been a c
168 onchiolitis [LB]) distribution, is common in lung transplant recipients and increases the risk for ch
169 ains a serious postoperative complication in lung transplant recipients and is associated with signif
170 cer-specific survival were noted between non-lung transplant recipients and nontransplant patients.
171 he blood and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) of lung transplant recipients and stratified recipients bas
175 ral blood mononuclear cell specimens from 39 lung transplant recipients at the time of transplantatio
176 dy was to evaluate survival to discharge for lung transplant recipients based on length of stay (LOS)
177 n the lung transplant waiting list and 6,110 lung transplant recipients between 2011 and 2014, compri
178 t.Methods: We enrolled 156 of the 209 double lung transplant recipients between December 2017 and Mar
179 specimens from symptomatic and asymptomatic lung transplant recipients both by culture (using a clin
180 d in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from lung transplant recipients by enzyme-linked immunosorben
181 usly monitors for rejection and infection in lung transplant recipients by sequencing of cell-free DN
183 alysis of transbronchial biopsies from human lung transplant recipients demonstrated an association b
186 and effective in treating CMV-infections in lung transplant recipients failing on currently availabl
187 similar increase in NKG2C NK cells occurs in lung transplant recipients following CMV reactivation in
189 of M. hominis infections were identified in lung transplant recipients from the same thoracic intens
190 ) was increased in bronchoalveolar lavage of lung transplant recipients growing P. aeruginosa (11.5 [
192 ncreased total hospital charges occurred for lung transplant recipients in 2005, corresponding to LAS
193 is was a retrospective cohort study of adult lung transplant recipients in the Scientific Registry of
203 lar clinical picture is seen, teams managing lung transplant recipients should be aware of this poten
204 efits of voriconazole use when prescribed to lung transplant recipients should be carefully weighed v
205 rospective study was performed including all lung transplant recipients suffering from bronchiolitis
208 e investigated a single-center cohort of 340 lung transplant recipients undergoing transplant during
213 ngitudinally in bronchoalveolar lavages from lung transplant recipients who developed bronchiolitis o
214 m preliminary survey was administered to 201 lung transplant recipients with a mean age of 57.9 (+/-1
215 nd serum HA and the HA immobilizer LYVE-1 in lung transplant recipients with and without acute cellul
220 3, and -4 in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) of lung transplant recipients with good outcome and BOS usi
221 se (PRM(PD)) were compared between bilateral lung transplant recipients with irreversible spirometric
225 We investigated the TTV-DNA levels in 34 lung transplant recipients within their first year after
229 pients, 190 liver transplant recipients, 102 lung transplant recipients, 79 heart transplant recipien
230 logy-oncology population and up to 23% among lung transplant recipients, and have a rate of 7.1-8.3 c
231 ore commonly than early-onset CMV disease in lung transplant recipients, and is associated with an in
232 elopment of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in lung transplant recipients, by attempting to account for
233 factors for common fungal infections seen in lung transplant recipients, evaluates the clinical effic
237 In bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from human lung transplant recipients, NETs were more abundant in p
238 es from healthy subjects, HIV+ subjects, and lung transplant recipients, providing a gradient of incr
239 can be so difficult to effectively treat in lung transplant recipients, the development of an animal
240 -derived CD4 T cells in 21 consecutive human lung transplant recipients, with 3 patterns of chimerism
241 ntially bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome in lung transplant recipients, with a greater propensity fo
273 three patients (86%) with NTM infection were lung transplant recipients; 18 of 43 (41.8%) were treate
275 t was indicated occurred in the HCV-infected lung-transplant recipients than in a cohort of patients
276 We investigated the effect of LAS trends on lung transplant-related costs, healthcare utilization, a
282 pportive care would assist hematopoietic and lung transplant units in optimizing resource allocation
284 ion between frailty and disability using the Lung Transplant Valued Life Activities disability scale.
285 ic stenosis who were successfully bridged to lung transplant via transcatheter aortic valve replaceme
286 ty-five centers were classified according to lung transplant volume in 2005-2010, with 8,228 adults (
287 retrospective, population-based study of all lung transplant wait-list candidates aged 12 years or ol
288 ber 31, 2014, included 9,043 patients on the lung transplant waiting list and 6,110 lung transplant r
289 cohort study of 13,346 adults placed on the lung transplant waiting list in the United States betwee
291 iation was present for heart transplant, and lung transplant was associated with higher mortality.
293 An adverse effect of ECMO at the time of lung transplant was evident in low-volume centers but ab
295 helial cells (PBECs), and PBECs derived post-lung transplant were transfected with miR-200b-3p mimics
296 d for with propensity score analysis, double-lung transplants were associated with better graft survi
299 railty is common among patients referred for lung transplant with a diagnosis of ILD and is associate
300 e amenable to surgical management, combining lung transplant with surgical valve repair is rarely don