The surgeon who led Europe’s first successful heart and lung transplant told of his joy at seeing patients go on to lead a good life on the 40th anniversary of the landmark operation.
Professor John Wallwork led the team of medics who carried out the pioneering surgery at the then Papworth Hospital in the village of Papworth Everard, Cambridgeshire, in 1984.
Patient Brenda Barber was 36 at the time of the procedure, overnight from April 4 to April 5.
The mother from south London had been days from death when she agreed to the surgery.
She went on to live for another decade with her new heart and lungs, dying in 1994.
Around 360 heart-lung transplants have been carried out at the leading cardiothoracic hospital since then.
Prof Wallwork, who retired as chairman of the now Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridge earlier this year, was reunited with some of his patients and former colleagues at the hospital on Thursday.
The 77-year-old was in America in 1981 when he helped with the world’s first heart-lung transplant, at Stanford University Hospital in California where he was chief resident.
He later led Europe’s first successful heart-lung transplant operation at Papworth Hospital in Cambridgeshire in 1984.
“The onus was on us to get it right,” he said, talking about the operation at Papworth.
“We’d done our homework and I’d done heart-lung transplants myself before in America.”
He said that after surgery Ms Barber “got back to leading her normal life, she got back to looking after her daughter, she got back to working as a childcare assistant, she lived 10 years following that transplant”.
“I think to see people who had very poor quality of life or indeed no life to look forward to actually leading a good normal life is just a great thrill,” said Prof Wallwork.
He said that “getting what is essentially pioneering stuff, getting it to be routine is the important thing because then you can help more people”.
Theatre scrub nurse Celia Hyde, who was part of the team for Ms Barber’s transplant, said: “It was such a privilege to be there, to actually see what was going on, to see that empty chest and then to hear that the patient was breathing, speaking and things a few days later.
“Absolutely fantastic.”
The 68-year-old said she moved onto working in transplant outpatients, where she cared for Ms Barber after her operation.
Dawn Wheeldon, 80, also a theatre scrub nurse in the medical team, said: “It was a privilege to be there, part of the team, to work with all the people I did and produced a result that gave her back her life really, and the ability to carry on and see her daughter grow up.
“That was one of her ambitions.”
She said it was “lovely” to be reunited with some of her former colleagues, adding that working at the old Papworth Hospital was “one of the happiest times of my career”.
One of the longest-surviving heart-transplant patients Tineke Dixon, of Exmouth in Devon, also attended the reunion.
The 51-year-old’s transplant surgery, at Great Ormond Street Hospital in November 1988, was also led by Prof Wallwork, who was helping train the surgeons there to have their own heart-lung programme.
She said she had been struggling to walk, was blue and pale and “basically losing my life” before her operation more than 35 years ago, and has since gone on to enjoy sailing and skydiving.
The project manager said it was “so lovely” to be reunited with Prof Wallwork and the medical team.
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