For more information on our recent data notice, please click here

Menu
Search

Second Breath: Region's First Double Lung Transplant for COVID-19 Patient

After more than 50 days on advanced life support, multi-disciplinary team at UC San Diego Health helps patient become candidate for successful lung transplant

August 24, 2021  |  

On a July afternoon, Federico Gomez Gil, 56, is dressed in a short-sleeved, collared shirt, sweatpants and a baseball cap. He sits in a chair in a hospital room, surrounded by his wife and two daughters. Given the past five months, this is the moment of a lifetime — a new lifetime.

Gomez Gil is recovering from a double lung transplant at UC San Diego Health after a severe case of COVID-19 ravaged his body and resulted in pneumonia that permanently impaired his ability to breathe.

“I felt extremely weak. I had a fever and chills,” said Gomez Gil, an Escondido resident diagnosed with COVID-19 in February 2021, before the vaccination was available to him. “I did not feel well at all.”

Gomez Gil and care team

After more than 50 days on advanced life support, a multi-disciplinary team at UC San Diego Health helps patient who contracted COVID-19 become candidate for a successful double lung transplant – the region’s first.

As his initial condition progressively worsened, he was transferred to the Sulpizio Cardiovascular Center at UC San Diego Health. He required life-saving support and care.

“What was eye-opening was that besides the COVID-19 virus, Mr. Gomez Gil was an otherwise healthy man,” said Eugene Golts, MD, cardiothoracic surgeon at UC San Diego Health who performed the nearly eight-hour double lung transplant surgery.

First, Gomez Gil was placed on a ventilator to assist with breathing, but it quickly became evident that a higher level of care was needed.

“He was on the brink of death when he arrived,” said Travis Pollema, DO, a cardiothoracic surgeon at UC San Diego Health who assisted Golts. “He would not have survived if he had not come to UC San Diego Health. We were able to provide him care with a combination of advanced technologies and approaches not available at any other hospital system in San Diego.”

Gomez Gil was placed on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, or ECMO. It is used when a ventilator alone is insufficient. ECMO works outside the body, pumping and oxygenating a patient's blood. The patient is connected to an ECMO machine via tubes, typically inserted into large arteries or veins in the neck and groin by cardiothoracic surgeons like Pollema. With their workload reduced, the patient’s heart and lungs are able to rest and heal.

Gomez Gil with family

Federico Gomez Gil with his wife of more than 30 years and two daughters reflect on what it has been like as the grandfather of four was hospitalized and recovering from a double lung transplant after severe complications of COVID-19.

Gomez Gil was on ECMO for more than 50 days. Prior to the pandemic, the standard time for a patient to be on ECMO was 9 to 12 days.

But ECMO is not a permanent remedy. And as the days passed, it became clear that Gomez Gil would require some form of ventilation for the rest of his life. The solution was a double lung transplant. That’s when a multi-disciplinary team of physical therapists, respiratory therapists, pulmonologists, surgeons and nursing staff began working around-the-clock to get him strong enough to be a viable candidate for the transplant surgery, which remains relatively rare. COVID-19 added a new and unknown factor.

“A requirement for transplant is that patients have a degree of mobility, even if on life support. We slowly wake patients up for periods of time and work with them to undergo a degree of physical therapy. It’s a marker for how well the patient will do following the surgery,” said Pollema.

While on ECMO, Gomez Gil did physical therapy for approximately nine weeks before his transplant surgery.

“This process can be difficult. The patient’s lungs have not worked on their own for a long period of time,” said Pollema. “With the help of a phenomenal team, we were able to work through that transition period with Mr. Gomez Gil.”

On June 14, 2021, Gomez Gil received his new lungs.

“The surgery went well and he has a good prognosis,” said Golts. “He has a long road to recovery, longer than most lung transplant patients because he needs to learn how to breathe again on his own after having mechanical lungs do it for him for so long.”

Approximately three months after surgery, Gomez Gil was discharged.

“This has been a rollercoaster of emotions,” said Guadalupe Gomez, Federico’s eldest daughter. “It has been amazing to see his progress. One day he had all these tubes in, and then eventually, they were removed and he was communicating with us. Now, he is back home. It’s been surreal.”

“I feel so much better today. I am most looking forward to spending time with my four grandkids,” said Gomez Gil. “I am so grateful to the donor and the entire medical team. I am so blessed to be a success story. I want people to know this virus is real and serious. It’s so important for everyone to protect themselves, follow all the safety precautions and get vaccinated.”

Gomez Gil’s story is an example of the premiere lung transplant program and collaboration of teams at UC San Diego Health, said Kamyar Afshar, DO, medical director of the lung transplant program at UC San Diego Health.

Gomez Gil discharged

After being hospitalized for five months battling COVID-19 and recovering from a double lung transplant, Federico Gomez Gil was discharged from the Sulpizio Cardiovascular Center at UC San Diego Health.

“We take treating every patient as an individual seriously. We want them to be able to enjoy their life with their loved ones for many years,” Afshar said. “We take great pride to have been part of Mr. Gomez Gil’s medical team. It is incredible to witness what we as people can overcome. We were able to nurse a gravely ill patient to the point of transplant and then give him a second chance at life.”

Post-transplant care for Gomez Gil includes strict monitoring from his medical team, daily anti-rejection and anti-infection medications, exercise and physical rehabilitation.

UC San Diego Health is the only hospital system in San Diego that performs lung transplants. The program is ranked #1 in the nation for one-year patient survival rates among programs with a volume of 50 to 75 lung transplants performed, and #3 among all lung transplant programs. It is part of a Pulmonary and Critical Care specialty ranked among the best in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Recently, the ECMO program at UC San Diego Health received the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) Gold Level Center of Excellence award.

Learn how to become an organ donor.






Media Contact

Michelle Brubaker
858-249-0416
mmbrubaker@health.ucsd.edu

Share This Article


Related News

9/8/2022
After a rare disease caused organ failure, UC San Diego Heath transplant teams performed a heart, liver and kidney transplant on a patient. The surgery is a first for UC San Diego Health and a first i ...
12/9/2021
How two of UC San Diego Health’s record-breaking 81 heart transplant recipients in 2021 forged a unique bond of mutual support.
7/6/2021
The lung transplant team at UC San Diego Health performed San Diego County’s first transplant surgery with lungs donated after cardiac death, an approach that could mean more opportunities to save the ...
5/26/2020
UC San Diego Health has deployed a mobile ECMO life support system to help sustain critically-ill patients during the pandemic.



Follow Us