Margaret Pratt

The Margaret Pratt Foundation Heart Lung Transplant Trust is a registered charity whose aim is to encourage, develop and maintain Australia’s world class expertise in the field of organ transplantation by supporting research that addresses the problems faced by children and adults after heart and lung transplant.

The aim of the research must be to improve the outcomes for heart and lung transplant recipients

Foundation Purpose

The Margaret Pratt Foundation Heart Lung Transplant Trust is a registered charity whose aim is to encourage, develop and maintain Australia’s world class expertise in the field of organ transplantation by supporting research that addresses the problems faced by children and adults after lung transplant.

The Foundation is made up of a team of volunteers who donate their time and skills to:
  • Raise awareness of problems faced by organ transplant recipients
  • Raise funds for research into these problems through monetary donations, in-kind donations and fundraising events
  • Promote organ donation
Services undertaken by The Foundation include:
  • Visiting patients waiting for transplantation
  • Providing funds for lung transplant research
  • Providing funds for medical equipment used in research

The Margaret Pratt Story

In 1993 I was diagnosed, after a long and difficult series of tests and explorations, with a condition called primary pulmonary hypertension a rare condition affecting the blood vessels of the lungs whereby they become very narrow restricting blood flow to the heart. Eventually this condition leads to heart failure and ultimately death. It has no known cause and mainly affects women in their 20's and 30's.

In 1993 the only treatment for PPH – not cure – was a double lung transplant. I was a fit, healthy 33 year old. I had a bright and exciting future and this all came crashing down around me as I sat in the doctor's office and he told me of my poor prognosis and my need for a double lung transplant.

At the young age of 33 I was placed on the waiting list at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne for a double lung transplant. My health deteriorated and I went from an independent young woman to being in a wheelchair and needing 24 hour round the clock care. I had to remain focused and determined to stay alive to reach transplantation.

Unfortunately 1 in 5 people waiting for a transplant die before organs become available. I waited 7 months before donor lungs became available. After a 10 hour operation, 1 week in a coma and 3 more weeks in hospital recovering and learning to walk again I left ready to restart life with the perseverance and determination that this challenge was not going to overcome me.

As I got on with my life I began to reflect on the need to do something to support the Alfred Hospital. Of course the issue of organ rejection was on my mind. Chronic lung rejection is the most serious problem facing all lung transplant recipients and is the largest cause of death. In 2001 I was diagnosed with Chronic Lung Rejection. By December of that year there was nothing more that could be done for me. The fear that I faced at that time was overwhelming.

As I lay dying, a decision was made by the medical team to put me on the list for a second transplant. This decision was not taken lightly and the ethical and moral as well as medical implications were discussed at great length. In January 2002 donor lungs became available and I became the 1st successful adult in Australia to undergo 2 double lung transplants. In January 2006 I once again became seriously ill with chronic lung rejection and within months my lungs failed to the point where i was near death, in a wheelchair and on oxygen 24 hours a day. My only hope of survival was a 3rd lung transplant and in August I became the only person in Australia to undergo 3 double lung transplants.

Why support The Alfred?
Performing 40-50 lung transplants per year, The Alfred’s Lung Transplant Service is not only the state centre for adult lung transplantation for Victoria, it is also among the worlds busiest and most successful. This year The Alfred hospital will be established as a centre of excellence for children’s lung transplants with the creation of the first dedicated Paediatric Lung Transplantation Program in Australia.

The Alfred hospital provides the highest level of lung transplant servicing per head of population in the world and is leading the way in research into areas such as airways pathophysiology in chronic lung rejection and it is this research that The Margaret Pratt Foundation is supporting.