The goal of this study is to learn whether a spontaneous-breathing ("tubeless") anesthesia and surgery strategy can improve early recovery and remain safe for adults who receive a lung transplant. This strategy aims to help lung transplant recipients maintain spontaneous breathing as much as possible during and after surgery, avoid tracheal intubation with invasive mechanical ventilation and deep sedation, and thereby support faster recovery while maintaining postoperative survival and safety. All participants will receive lung transplantation supported by the same spontaneous-breathing ("tubeless") strategy. Researchers plan to enroll about 110 participants at several hospitals in China. A separate study team will review the main outcomes using predefined study rules. The main questions this study aims to answer are: The main questions this study aims to answer are: among adult lung transplant recipients, does an anesthesia-surgical strategy that preserves spontaneous breathing improve early postoperative recovery while remaining safe during the first 30 days after surgery? The study will focus on the need for postoperative invasive mechanical ventilation, length of postoperative hospital stays, and in-hospital mortality. Participants will: Complete screening tests and assessments before surgery (up to about 30 days before the transplant). Undergo lung transplantation using a standardized approach that aims to keep spontaneous breathing function, often using a laryngeal mask airway instead of a breathing tube. Receive pain and cough control measures (such as local anesthesia or nerve block anesthesia) and close monitoring during and after surgery. Receive standard postoperative care. If safety concerns arise, the clinical team will use invasive mechanical ventilation or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation when needed. Be followed during the hospital stay and for 90 days after surgery to record recovery, complications, and readmissions.
This is a prospective, multicenter, single-arm clinical study designed to evaluate a standardized perioperative pathway for adult lung transplantation that aims to preserve spontaneous breathing ("tubeless" strategy). The study will enroll approximately 110 participants across multiple hospitals in China. To reduce assessment bias in a single-arm design, key study endpoints will be evaluated by an independent team using prespecified definitions and adjudication rules. The investigational perioperative pathway integrates anesthesia and surgical management with the goal of maintaining the participant's own breathing as much as possible during and after transplantation, while minimizing exposure to tracheal intubation, invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV), and deep sedation. The approach typically uses a laryngeal mask airway (LMA) for airway support, intravenous anesthesia with careful titration, and multimodal analgesia to achieve adequate comfort and cough control while allowing spontaneous respiration. Regional and/or local anesthetic techniques may be used to improve pain control and reduce airway stimulation. Intraoperative monitoring and ventilatory support are individualized, and lung recruitment or short periods of assisted ventilation may be used when clinically indicated. Participant safety is prioritized throughout the procedure and postoperative period. The clinical team may convert to conventional tracheal intubation and IMV at any time if predefined clinical concerns arise, such as inadequate gas exchange, airway protection issues, hemodynamic instability, uncontrolled bleeding, or conditions that compromise surgical safety. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) may be initiated or escalated when necessary according to institutional practice and prespecified clinical triggers. Postoperatively, participants receive standard transplant care per each center's routine protocols, including intensive monitoring and timely escalation of respiratory or circulatory support when required. The study timeline includes a screening period prior to transplantation, comprehensive perioperative data capture, in-hospital follow-up through discharge, and structured follow-up after discharge to document early recovery and safety outcomes. Safety surveillance focuses on events occurring within 30 days after transplantation, and additional follow-up through 90 days captures short-term outcomes such as survival status and rehospitalization. All study data are recorded in standardized case report forms and entered into a centralized database with built-in quality checks. The coordinating center oversees data completeness and consistency across sites, and the independent outcome review team adjudicates endpoints according to prespecified rules.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
110
This intervention uses a spontaneous-breathing-preserving anesthesia strategy during lung transplantation, which differs from conventional management based on endotracheal intubation and invasive mechanical ventilation. A supraglottic airway (laryngeal mask airway) is used when feasible instead of endotracheal intubation to maintain spontaneous breathing throughout the procedure. Neuromuscular blocking agents are minimized, and regional nerve blocks (such as intercostal nerve blocks or paravertebral blocks) are used to control pain and suppress cough while preserving the patient's ability to breathe independently. After surgery, patients receive protocol-guided noninvasive respiratory support (for example, high-flow nasal oxygen or noninvasive ventilation), with the goal of avoiding routine invasive mechanical ventilation.
Number of Participants Requiring Postoperative Invasive Mechanical Ventilation (IMV) During Index Hospitalization
Number of participants who require postoperative invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) delivered via an endotracheal tube or tracheostomy tube at any time after leaving the operating room and before hospital discharge (including in-hospital death).
Time frame: From ICU admission immediately after leaving the operating room until hospital discharge or in-hospital death, assessed up to 90 days postoperatively (if hospitalization extends beyond 90 days, events after day 90 will not be counted for this outcome).
Postoperative Hospital Length of Stay (Days) During Index Hospitalization
the number of days from the end of surgery (postoperative Day 0) to the date the participant is discharged from the index hospitalization, according to institutional discharge criteria. Participants who die in hospital will be assigned length of stay through the date of in-hospital death.
Time frame: From end of surgery (postoperative Day 0) until hospital discharge or in-hospital death (index hospitalization), assessed up to 90 days.
Rate of Perioperative Survival
Perioperative survival is defined as the proportion of participants who remain alive from the start of transplant surgery through hospital discharge or postoperative Day 30, whichever occurs first. Participants who die before discharge or before postoperative Day 30 will be counted as non-survivors for this outcome.
Time frame: From start of transplant surgery through hospital discharge or postoperative Day 30, whichever occurs first.
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