Health condition · plain-language reference
Lung Transplantation
A lung transplant removes a person's diseased lung and replaces it with a healthy one. The healthy lung comes from a donor who has died. Some people get one lung during a transplant. Other people get two. Lung transplants are used for people who are likely to die from lung disease within 1 to 2 years. Their conditions are so severe that other treatments, such as medicines or breathing devices, no longer work. Lung transplants most often are used to treat people who have severe: COPD Cystic fibrosis Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency Pulmonary hypertension Complications of lung transplantation include rejection of the transplanted lung and infection. NIH: National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Plain-language summary from MedlinePlus (NIH/NLM) ↗. For informational purposes only — not medical advice.
Medications used for lung transplantation
Drugs whose FDA labeling names this condition among its indications — informational, not a recommendation.
- CyclosporineCalcineurin Inhibitor Immunosuppressant [EPC]›
- AzathioprinePurine Antimetabolite [EPC]›
- Mycophenolate Mofetil›
- Neostigmine›
- SirolimusmTOR Inhibitor Immunosuppressant [EPC]›
- TacrolimusCalcineurin Inhibitor Immunosuppressant [EPC]›
- Mycophenolic Acid›
- AbataceptSelective T Cell Costimulation Modulator [EPC]›
- BasiliximabInterleukin-2 Receptor Blocking Antibody [EPC]›
- Mycophenilic AcidAntimetabolite Immunosuppressant [EPC]›
- Valganciclovir Hydrochloride Powder,›
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