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Damaged Lung Cancels Transplant

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From Associated Press

A 19-year-old woman returned home to wait for a new donor Saturday after her plans to undergo a rare triple transplant were canceled because a donated lung had been damaged.

Brandy Stroeder, who has been fighting the Oregon Health Plan for the right to a lung, liver and heart transplant, had been flown to the hospital in Palo Alto, Calif., for the surgery after learning about the available organs early Friday.

She had been in the hospital for several hours undergoing tests in preparation for the surgery Friday when the transplant was called off.

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“She came in, she underwent the evaluation and was in good condition. Unfortunately--and this is not uncommon--once the organs were retrieved, they were not viable,” said a hospital spokeswoman.

Stroeder has cystic fibrosis, a disease that chokes her lungs with mucus and causes other organ damage. Without a transplant, Stroeder would probably die within two years. She relies on an oxygen tank to breathe.

Christine Pashley, a spokeswoman for Doernbecher Children’s Hospital in Portland, where Stroeder has received care, said Stroeder had arrived in Portland early Saturday afternoon.

“Obviously, it’s a very difficult time for Brandy right now,” Pashley said. “You never know how long it’s going to be [until the next donor], and that’s the hard part.”

Only three heart-lung-liver transplants have taken place in the United States, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing.

Last year, the Oregon Health Plan, which provides health insurance to Oregon’s poor, refused to pay for the transplant, saying the operation is experimental. It could cost more than $250,000.

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Stroeder, who lives about 20 miles southwest of Portland, has said she wants those who come after her to have an easier time getting the health care they need.

The Oregon Appeals Court has not ruled. A community effort led by millionaire motel magnate Mark Hemstreet has raised $300,000 toward her medical costs.

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