Hanoi: (WNAM Monitoring)Vietnam’s recent achievements in organ transplant have made the country one of the bright spots in Southeast Asia and Asia in this field.
On February 9, or the last day of the Year of the Cat, doctors of the Central Lung Hospital performed a double lung transplant on a 21-year-old patient. This is the most difficult among the organ transplant techniques.
The transplant was successful at the highest level according to international standards from the UCSF Lung Health Centre – one of the nine largest and most prestigious lung transplant centres in the US, showing that Vietnam has approached and mastered the top technique in the field of organ transplant.
At the Asian Transplantation Week 2023 (ATW 2023), the organising committee designed a seminar on the Vietnamese organ transplant industry, and this proves the country’s position and reputation in the specialised and complex technique.
The result is thanks to efforts of Vietnamese doctors and scientists over the past 30 years since the first kidney transplant for a 40-year-old patient with terminal-stage kidney failure conducted in 1992 at Military Hospital 103.
In 2017, Vietnam successfully performed the first lung transplant and heart transplant for a pediatric patient. A year later, the country carried out lung and kidney transplants from brain-dead donors with success. In 2019, a series of surgeries to transplant multiple organs from brain-dead donors were performed simultaneously. In 2020, the first limb transplant surgery in Southeast Asia and intestinal transplant from a living donor were successfully performed, helping Vietnam become one of the 22 countries in the world that can perform intestinal transplant techniques. In 2023, heart and kidney transplants were conducted with the coordination of hospitals in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi.
Currently, Vietnam has 25 organ transplant centres across the country, not only at the central level but also at the local one. By the beginning of 2024, there had been nearly 8,000 organ transplants performed, including more than 7,000 kidney transplants and 500 liver transplants, meaning that many lives have been extended.
Vietnam has now mastered the most important and common organ transplant techniques in clinical practice, such as kidney, heart, liver, pancreas, and lung, with an even higher survival rate after organ transplants than in developed countries. Particularly, the cost of organ transplants in Vietnam is only about 1/8 of that in Thailand and 1/24 of that in the US.