Single versus double lung transplantation for fibrotic disease—systematic review
Systematic Review

Single versus double lung transplantation for fibrotic disease—systematic review

Ashley R. Wilson-Smith1,2#, Yong Sul Kim1#, Georgina E. Evans1, Tristan D. Yan2,3,4

1The University of New South Wales, Medicine, Sydney, Australia;2The Collaborative Research Group (CORE), Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia;3The Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia;4Sydney Adventist Hospital, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

#These authors contributed equally to this work.

Correspondence to: Ashley R. Wilson-Smith. The Collaborative Research Group (CORE), Sydney, Australia. Email: wilsonsmithash597@gmail.com.

Background: Lung transplantation has long been the accepted therapy for end-stage pulmonary fibrotic disease. Presently, there is an ongoing debate over whether single or bilateral transplantation is the most appropriate treatment for end-stage disease, with a paucity of high-quality evidence comparing the two approaches head-to-head.

Methods: This review was performed in accordance with PRISMA recommendations and guidance. Searches were performed on PubMed Central, Scopus and Medline from dates of database inception to September 2019. For the assessed papers, data was extracted from the reviewed text, tables and figures, by two independent authors. Estimated survival was analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method for studies where time-to-event data was provided.

Results: Overall, 4,212 unique records were identified from the literature search. Following initial screening and the addition of reference list findings, 83 full-text articles were assessed for eligibility, of which 17 were included in the final analysis, with a total of 5,601 patients. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis illustrated improved survival in patients receiving bilateral lung transplantation (BLTx) than in those receiving unilateral transplantation for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis at all time intervals, with aggregated survival for BLTx at 57%, 35.3% and 24% at 5-, 10- and 15-year follow-up, respectively. Survival rates for SLTx were 50%, 27.8% and 13.9%, respectively.

Conclusions: Whilst a number of studies present conflicting results with respect to short-term transplantation outcomes, BLTx confers improved long-term survival over SLTx, with large-scale registries supporting findings from single- and multi-center studies. Through an aggregation of published survival data, this meta-analysis identified improved survival in patients receiving BLTx versus SLTx at all time intervals.

Keywords: Lung transplantation; fibrotic disease; outcomes


Submitted Nov 16, 2019. Accepted for publication Dec 13, 2019.

doi: 10.21037/acs.2019.12.04


Introduction

Lung transplantation has long been an accepted therapy for end-stage pulmonary fibrotic disease given the poor long-term prognosis of patients managed with medical and conservative treatment (1). Presently, there is an ongoing debate over whether single (SLTx) or bilateral (BLTx) lung transplantation is the most appropriate treatment, with a paucity of high-quality evidence comparing the two approaches head-to-head (2). As such, practice is still largely specific to the institution or to the surgeon’s preference. Historically, SLTx has been used under the rationale that it is a more limited operation and hence is more appropriate for high-risk candidates; however, as surgical techniques have improved, bilateral transplantation—particularly with its increasingly acceptable long-term morbidity and mortality—has become predominant. Given the heterogeneity of interstitial lung diseases, particularly in terms of their etiology and pathophysiology, substantive subgroup analysis to date has been hindered outside of registry findings, with patient outcomes highly variable within the literature (3). The present systematic review will detail the mid- and late-term outcomes after SLTx vs. BLTx for pulmonary fibrotic disease and will provide an aggregation of the present data on survival outcomes.


Methods

Literature search

This review was performed in accordance with PRISMA recommendations and guidance (4,5). Electronic searches were performed on PubMed Central, Scopus and Medline from dates of database inception to September 2019, using the terms (“lung transplantation” OR “lung transplant”) AND (“single” OR “unilateral” OR “bilateral” OR “double”) AND (“pulmonary fibrosis” OR “idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis”) as either keywords or MeSH headings. After removal of duplicate records, studies were screened according to their titles and abstracts, then reviewed according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria detailed below by two independent authors (AR Wilson-Smith, YS Kim). Conflicts were resolved by the senior researcher (AR Wilson-Smith). A PRISMA diagram of the search strategy is presented in Figure S1. Additional references for discussion were obtained by reference list searches, or via targeted database searches.

Figure S1 PRISMA flow chart detailing the literature search process for mid- to late-term outcomes of single vs. bilateral lung transplantation in the setting of pulmonary fibrosis.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Studies were eligible for this review if they had at least ten patients in their cohorts and where transplantation (either SLTx or BLTx) was indicated primarily for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Follow-up of a minimum of one year was also required. Non-English records, review articles, conference and paper abstracts, editorials, letters, case reports, series, and opinions were excluded. Studies were excluded from analysis if they failed to delineate between SLTx and BLTx outcomes, or if no mention was made of the outcome between the two approaches qualitatively.

Studies which aggregated etiologies in their survival analysis (e.g., IPF + cystic fibrosis + chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) were excluded from quantitative analysis, as were emergent surgeries. Duplicate studies were removed prior to the commencement of the literature screen and only the most up-to-date references from ongoing studies or registries were reviewed for statistical aggregation to minimize patient overlap. Studies were also excluded if they did not present baseline patient characteristics, or if the study was centered on pediatric patients (i.e., those <18 years).

Data extraction, statistical analysis and presentation

For the assessed papers, data was extracted from the reviewed text, tables and figures. Data was extracted independently by two independent authors (AR Wilson-Smith, YS Kim) into Microsoft Excel. Discrepancies were reviewed and discussed until a consensus was reached. Findings are presented in Tables 1-3. Estimated survival was analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method in studies where time-to-event data was provided (6). Censoring was assumed to be constant, unless the particular curve had a long follow-up of only minimal patients—in which case, censoring was manually entered. Death events and censoring data were compiled for the entire patient cohort and overall survival curves were produced using R Studio (7).

Table 1
Table 1 Study characteristics and clinical outcomes
Full table
Table 2
Table 2 Single versus bilateral lung transplantation study characteristics
Full table
Table 3
Table 3 Reported mortality and morbidity
Full table

Quality assessment of included studies

An appraisal schema based on the Canadian National Institute of Health Economics’ (CNIHE) Quality Assessment Tool (i.e., the modified Delphi technique) for case series studies was employed to evaluate all included studies (Figure S2). Studies were categorized based on the following domains: clarity of study objective, adequate description of the study population, description of the intervention, adequate reporting of outcome measures, appropriate reporting of results/conclusions (quality findings are listed in Table 1, criteria are provided in Figure S2). Studies were considered to be of high quality if they addressed at least 15 of the 19 criteria outlined in the CNIHE tool. Moderate quality was defined as 13–15 of 19 and low quality below 13 of 19.

Figure S2 Quality appraisal criteria.

Results

Overall, 4,212 unique records were identified from the literature search (Figures S1,S3). Following initial screening and the addition of reference list findings, 83 full-text articles were assessed for their eligibility, of which 17 were included in the final analysis. Six studies were included in the quantitative synthesis (8-13). The search of 4,212 records yielded 17 studies which met inclusion criteria, with a total of 5,601 patients. The majority of studies (90%) were found to be of high quality according to the CNIHE tool, with the remainder as moderate quality. The majority of studies included in the final analysis were from European or United States centers, with the remainder being drawn from Asian, Canadian or Central American centers.

Figure S3 Search strategy supplementary.

Survival—SLTx vs. BLTx

All curves digitized and aggregated in this study were unadjusted. Aggregated survival for SLTx at 5-, 10- and 15-year time intervals was 50%, 27.8% and 13.9%, respectively. Survival for BLTx was 57%, 35.3% and 24%, respectively (Figure 1).

Figure 1 Kaplan-Meier survival analysis for single versus bilateral lung transplantation in IPF. IPF, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; BLTx, bilateral lung transplantation; SLTx, single lung transplantation.

Morbidity—SLTx vs. BLTx

Reported morbidity findings are detailed in Table 3. Three studies outlined morbidity data quantitatively (8,10,11). Length of hospital stay was statistically significant in two studies in favor of SLTx. Length of ICU stay was only significant in one study in favor of SLTx. All other reported complication rates were not statistically significant between the two surgical modalities.


Discussion

SLTx vs. BLTx: head-to-head studies

Out of the seven studies that present survival rates of BLTx vs. SLTx specifically for IPF patients, three of these studies establish improved survival in patients receiving SLTx. De Oliveira et al. demonstrate in 79 patients that survival is better in SLTx up to 5 years. The 1-, 3-, 5-year survival rates of SLTx vs. BLTx were 81.8% vs. 73%, 65.4% vs. 60.2%, 62.7% vs. 53.5% (P=0.68), respectively (8). The 10-year survival rate was 39% vs. 42.8%, respectively. Meyers et al. demonstrate survival rates of SLTx vs. BLTx being 81% vs. 77%, 63% vs. 54% and 50% vs. 38% for the 1-, 3- and 5-year endpoints (P=0.42) (10). These rates were established in 32 SLTx and 13 sequential BLTx; no difference in in-hospital mortality between SLTx (9.40%) and BLTx (7.70%) was noted.

The most recent single center study by Wei et al. (11) demonstrated survival rates in a cohort of 109 patients of 80.8% vs. 66.7% and 73.8% vs. 63.3% for SLTx vs. BLTx, at 1- and 2-year survival, respectively (P=0.13). When the survival rates of SLTx vs. BLTx in IPF patients are further stratified by age <60 and age >60, SLTx had significantly greater survival in the over-60 age-group (P=0.008).

The other studies align with the findings of the UNOS Registry and ISHLT registry, which outline that BLTx has improved survival for IPF patients over SLTx (14-22). In their cohort of 469 patients, 82 of which had IPF, Mason et al. found that patients receiving BLTx had better risk-unadjusted survival than those receiving SLTx, with 1-year survival at 81% and 67%, and 5-year survival at 55% and 34%, respectively. BLTx survival rates were similar to those for non-IPF indications (9). Following matched analysis, the benefit of BLTx over SLTx was not maintained, with perioperative mortality and short-term postoperative mortality both at 6% (10).

Neurohr et al. found a significant survival benefit of BLTx over SLTx in their cohort of 76 patients at 1-year and in overall survival (P=0.026) (13). Although SLTx had a higher percentage of acute rejection (35.6%) compared to BLTx (29.6%), this was not statistically significant; however, there was a significantly higher number of deaths in SLTx compared to BLTx as a result of the development of bronchiolitis obliterans. Kreisel et al. demonstrate a higher survival rate in BLTx for the 5- and 10-year mark (23). Interestingly, Kreisel extracted data from 1988 to 2009, including the data used in the Meyers et al. (10) study from the same institution (1988–1998); however, it appears that the data from the extended 10-year follow-up reversed the survival benefit that SLTx had over BLTx found by Meyers et al. (10) One reason for this finding may be improved surgical technique of BLTx within the last ten years, or alternatively, BLTx may in fact have improved long-term survival benefits after the initial convalescence period. Keating et al. (12) demonstrated a survival rate pattern similar to that of De Oliveira et al. (8) up to the 3-year mark, the survival rate was higher for SLTx compared to BLTx; however, at the 5-year mark, BLTx conferred a higher survival rate of 50% compared to SLTx at 29%.

Six studies outlined findings for IPF patients undergoing transplantation but did not stratify for surgical approach with quantitative analysis. For instance, Algar et al. found that survival did not differ between SLTx and BLTx at long-term follow-up, noting that whilst BLTx conferred increased mortality in the short-term, the long-term survival benefit offset the initial mortality (24). A number of studies compared SLTx and BLTx, but did not differentiate for etiology. de Perrot et al. (15) found in their cohort of 501 patients, long-term survival was higher in patients receiving BLTx vs. patients receiving SLTx (P=0.07); when separately analyzing for etiology (i.e., cystic fibrosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, IPF, etc.) this effect disappeared; however, no data were presented in-text.

Database analysis of IPF patient outcomes

Villavicencio et al. (25) presents the most recent data comparing survival outcomes of SLTx vs. BLTx in IPF recipients. This study includes 9,191 lung transplant recipients with IPF from 1987 to 2015. They have demonstrated that BLTx has improved survival outcomes in IPF patients compared to SLTx across all lung allocation scores and additionally when adjusted for age, excepting those exceeding 70 years (P<0.001). The International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation Registry (ISHLT) have collated the survival outcomes of SLTx vs. BLTx in IPF patients and presented their data on transplant recipients with IPF from January 1990 to June 2016. Kaplan-Meier curves were produced from 1,043 SLTx patients with IPF and 1,936 BLTx patients with IPF. BLTx was shown to have improved survival outcomes compared to SLTx at each year from the 1st year to the 16th year (P<0.0001).

Limitations

To the authors’ knowledge, this is the most recent and thorough systematic review of the literature comparing SLTx to BLTx in the context of IPF and the only review to incorporate an aggregation of survival data across single- and multi-center studies and registries.

However, are several limitations with respect to the present review. The number of single- and multi-center studies analyzing the survival outcomes of IPF patients with clear stratification of which patients received SLTx and BLTx was low, with only 17 studies meeting the final inclusion criteria. The majority of these studies provided survival outcomes of IPF recipients compared to other transplant recipients of varying indications, and/or survival outcomes comparing SLTx vs. BLTx in all transplant recipients. Only six studies—with one potentially replicated dataset—were able to stratify survival outcomes by SLTx vs. BLTx specifically for IPF patients.

The limited number of studies with survival outcomes and stratification between surgical approaches prevented meaningful quantitative analysis of the single- and multi-center studies, requiring an aggregation of the findings from large registries. It is likely that there is a degree of patient overlap, as patients within the registries would have been drawn from these single- and multi-center studies; however, using the methods of Sampson et al. who present techniques for identifying cohort overlap, this was mitigated as far as possible (26). Although registry studies are extremely useful (i.e., they benefit from large numbers that allow for sound statistical analysis), it is of note that they include and collate data from a wide array of centers, with surgeons of variable expertise, using different surgical protocols and incomplete patient data. Hence, in centers which have always preferred one technique over another become highly proficient in that technique; it would not be surprising to note outcomes that go against the findings from registry data.

The primary constraint of this review is that the single- and multi-center studies identified have often yielded conflicting results, with largely uninterpretable or sparsely reported data (from a meta-analytical perspective) supporting their recommendations; often, no differentiation is made between the indications for transplantation (e.g., cystic fibrosis, IPF, etc.) or which patients are receiving what type of intervention (i.e., SLTx or BLTx). Further, very limited morbidity data were reported, with only three studies comparing SLTx and BLTx for IPF providing quantitative results (Table 3). Often, authors would make comments in their discussions noting that one technique was more favorable in terms of survival or complications, but with no analysis to substantiate the claims.

In order to carry out definitive analysis, it is critical that patients with different pathologies are not grouped and vice versa for transplantation technique, as the level of heterogeneity strongly calls into question the validity of the findings. It is imperative that for future analysis of survival outcomes, clinicians and researchers provide datasets which have been stratified appropriately for etiology as well as for surgical approach.


Conclusions

Whilst a number of studies present conflicting results with respect to short-term transplantation outcomes, the consensus is that BLTx confers improved long-term survival over that of SLTx, with large-scale registries supporting the findings from single- and multi-center studies. Through an aggregation of the present survival data, this meta-analysis identified improved survival in patients receiving BLTx versus those receiving SLTx at all time intervals.


Acknowledgments

None.


Footnote

Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.


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Cite this article as: Wilson-Smith AR, Kim YS, Evans GE, Yan TD. Single versus double lung transplantation for fibrotic disease—systematic review. Ann Cardiothorac Surg 2020;9(1):10-19. doi: 10.21037/acs.2019.12.04

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