
California Doctor Receives Northwestern Medicine’s First Combined Lung-Liver Transplant for Advanced Lung Cancer
Gary Gibbon, MD, pulmonologist and allergist, visited Chicago for a first-of-its-kind transplant procedure, becoming the first person in the U.S. to receive a double-lung and liver transplant for advanced lung cancer.
For the first time at Northwestern Medicine, surgeons have successfully performed a combined lung-liver transplant on a patient with advanced lung cancer who had limited time to live. The patient, 69-year-old
“To our knowledge, this is the first known case in the nation where a patient with advanced lung cancer has successfully received a combined lung-liver transplant,” said
“Even though a combined lung-liver transplant for advanced lung cancer had never been done before, our team was confident we could do this, and more importantly, Dr. Gibbon had full confidence in us,” said
Originally from Cape Town, South Africa, Dr. Gibbon moved to Santa Monica where he was in
“As a pulmonologist, I never imagined I’d ever need a lung transplant – let alone for lung cancer,” said Dr. Gibbon. “While my doctors in California had done everything they could, we knew there was only one place in the entire country that could give me a fighting chance, and after speaking with Dr. Bharat, I could see the light at the end of the tunnel.”
“Dr. Gibbon met the criteria to receive a double-lung transplant through our DREAM program, but as the preliminary evaluation was performed prior to his acceptance to Northwestern Medicine, our team discovered that he had also developed liver cirrhosis from the immunotherapy. We had to modify our DREAM program and work with Dr. Nadig’s team to formulate a pathway for Dr. Gibbon to receive not only a double-lung transplant, but a concurrent liver transplant. Fortunately, we were able to do it just in time for Dr. Gibbon to receive this first-of-its-kind procedure,” said Dr. Bharat.
On Sept. 10, the then 68-year-old was transported to Chicago via a four-hour medical flight and waited for new organs from his ICU bed at
Drs. Bharat and Nadig worked together during the 10-hour procedure. While the new lungs were put in first, the donor liver was kept alive outside the body thanks to new technology called
“Transplantation is ever evolving and we’re embarking upon the era of technology. Dr. Bharat anticipated that the lung transplant would be extremely challenging due to the size of Dr. Gibbon’s tumor and the different types of treatments, including radiation, to the lungs and chest which would result in the lungs getting fused to the surrounding structures. To give Dr. Bharat sufficient time to meticulously remove the damaged lungs and all the cancer, we used the new liver perfusion technology through which we were able to keep the liver alive outside the body for an extended duration,” said Dr. Nadig. “Dr. Gibbon’s transplant took so many resources and teams across multiple departments at multiple health systems. To leave his ICU bed in California, travel to Chicago, get him listed, then transplanted, while using technologies and techniques that aren’t common, took extreme efforts. Northwestern Medicine handles complicated cases very well.”
To date, the Canning Thoracic Institute (CTI) has performed more than 30 lung transplants for patients under the DREAM program, including several with terminal stage IV lung cancer and one in which cancer from another organ had spread to the lungs. Using lessons learned from
“Unlike the conventional technique of sequential transplants, this innovative technique involves putting the patient on full heart and lung bypass, delicately taking both cancer-ridden lungs out at the same time along with the lymph nodes, washing the airways and the chest cavity to clear the cancer, and then putting new lungs in,” said Dr. Bharat. “These patients can have billions of cancer cells in the lungs, so we must be extremely meticulous to not let a single cell spill into the patient’s chest cavity or blood stream. We believe this technique can help reduce the risk of recurrence, which we learned through our experience with pioneering COVID-19 lung transplants.”
The outcomes of the program’s patients are being tracked in a research registry also called
“I’ve been a physician for decades, and we tend to be conservative at times with our treatment plans, which is why the enormity of the science that went into this procedure is awe-inspiring to me,” said Dr. Gibbon. “As a physician, I knew I was in the right place. I wasn’t just stepping on the moon by myself. It took surgeons, oncologists, transplant specialists, nurses, respiratory therapists and most importantly, my donor, to help me get my ‘Triple L’ – two lungs and a liver. This DREAM program is new territory for transplantation and the fact that I could experience it and have a wonderful outcome makes me feel so blessed. I wouldn’t be here today without Northwestern Medicine.”
“Because Dr. Gibbon is a pulmonologist and allergy specialist, he’s familiar with lung diseases, which made this case even more special,” said Dr. Bharat. “As physicians helping another physician, we feel very proud that we were able to do something that hopefully opens the doors for future patients who would otherwise not survive.”
Cancers of the lung are the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States with more people dying of lung cancer than colon, breast and prostate cancers combined. Lung cancer patients interested in being evaluated for a lung transplant can contact the



































