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עמוד בית
Wed, 28.01.26

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December 2025
Shimon Izhakian MD PhD, Osnat Shtraichman MD, Dorit Shitenberg MD, Dror Rosengarten MD, Eviatar Naamany MD, Alon Gorenshtein MD, Mordechai Reuven Kramer MD FCCP

Background: Lung transplantation (LT) is a viable option for end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients when conventional treatments fail. However, sex disparities in mortality outcomes among COPD patients awaiting LT remain understudied. LT waiting lists are generally shorter in Western countries compared to Israel.

Objectives: To evaluate sex-specific differences in mortality and co-morbidities among COPD patients awaiting lung transplantation, to identify key risk factors influencing survival.

Methods: We assessed associations between sex, co-morbidities, exacerbations, and mortality using Cox regression models, adjusting for confounders. Survival curves for lung transplant candidates were stratified by sex using Fine and Gray models.

Results: We identified 385 COPD patients listed for LT at Rabin Medical Center. Females exhibited higher rates of asthma (P = 0.008), anxiety (P = 0.005), and depression (P = 0.002); males were more frequently diagnosed with ischemic heart disease (26.5% vs. 10.83%, P = 0.001) and had a higher lung transplant rate (24.9% vs. 15%, P = 0.029). Multivariate analysis revealed that female sex (hazard ratio [HR] 1.55, 95% confidence interval [95%CI] 1.06–2.29, P = 0.025), older age (HR 1.02, 95%CI 1.002–1.054, P = 0.035), ischemic heart disease (HR 1.69, 95%CI 1.12–2.48, P = 0.011), and depression (HR 1.81, 95%CI 1.15–2.83, P < 0.01) were significantly associated with increased mortality. Females showed higher 1-year mortality rates than males (40.3% vs. 29.8%, P < 0.001).

Conclusions: Female sex is a significant risk factor for increased mortality among COPD patients awaiting LT, likely due to a higher burden of co-morbidities.

Shimon Izhakian MD PhD, Lena Slobodscoy Ignatov MD, Alon Gorenshtein MD, Benjamin Rothschild MD, Elizabeth Fireman PhD, Dror Rosengarten MD, Mordechai Reuven Kramer MD FCCP

Background: The incidence of non-tuberculous mycobacterium (NTM) infections has been rising in patients with chronic lung diseases. These infections cause significant morbidity, mortality, and elevated healthcare costs due to challenges in recognition, delayed diagnosis, and treatment. While NTM infections in natural stone silicosis are documented, the incidence in artificial stone silicosis remains unexplored despite increasing exposure to silica dust.

Objectives: To describe the clinical, radiological, and pathological features of NTM infections in patients with artificial stone silicosis and emphasize the importance of early diagnosis.

Methods: We reviewed the database of a tertiary medical center in Israel from 2010 to 2024 and identified patients with occupational artificial stone silicosis diagnosed with NTM infection.

Results: We found eight patients with occupational artificial stone silicosis, all male, aged 42–74 years. Key symptoms included dyspnea, cough, weight loss, and fever. Computed tomography revealed mediastinal lymphadenopathy, progressive massive fibrosis, calcifications, pulmonary cavitations, pleural thickening, traction bronchiectasis, pulmonary nodules, and honeycombing. Biopsies showed silicotic nodules, birefringent crystals, pulmonary alveolar silico-proteinosis, fibrosis, and honeycombing. Four patients received NTM-targeted antibiotics, and six underwent lung transplantation. Four patients died.

Conclusions: Artificial stone silicosis may be associated with NTM infections. Early diagnosis requires a high degree of clinical suspicion. New or worsening respiratory or systemic symptoms in patients with silicosis should prompt further microbiological evaluation, including sputum culture or bronchoalveolar lavage. Further studies are needed to assess the incidence of NTM infections in this population.

Moshe Heching MD, Shimon Izhakian MD, Orly Efros MD, Maor Mermelstein MD, Avigail Rockland BS, Moshe Shai Amor MD, Lev Freidkin MD, Dror Rosengarten MD, Dorit Shitenberg MD, Yael Shostak MD, Osnat Shtraichman MD, Mordechai Reuven Kramer MD

Cerebral arterial air embolism (CAAE) is a rare, but often fatal, complication of interventional bronchoscopy. Despite its rarity, a high index of suspicion can facilitate early diagnosis and prompt treatment. Standard of care treatment for CAAE is hyperbaric oxygen therapy, despite limited definitive data supporting its efficacy, given the conceptual potential for reversibility of neurological impairment. We describe five cases from our institution, and review the clinical presentation, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of suspected CAAE. Based on published case reports involving transbronchial lung biopsies (TBLB), standard of care treatment for CAAE secondary to TBLB is hyperbaric oxygen therapy, although its efficacy in this context has not been unambiguously validated in clinical practice.

August 2016
Shimon Izhakian MD, Walter G. Wasser MD, Baruch Vainshelboim PhD, Benjamin D. Fox BM BS and Mordechai R. Kramer MD FCCP

Background: Studies in lung transplantation demonstrate that the ancestry and gender dissimilarities of donor–recipients lead to a decrease in survival of the recipient. 

Objectives: To evaluate the survival of lung transplant recipients in Israel based on whether the donors and recipients are of Jewish or Arab ancestry as well as survival based on gender match or mismatch.

Methods: We performed a retrospective observational cohort study of 345 lung transplant recipients at the Rabin Medical Center, Petah Tikva, Israel between January 1997 and January 2013. We compared the survival of lung transplant recipients in two ancestry categories: ancestry matched (Jewish donors to Jewish recipients or Arab donors to Arab recipients) and ancestry mismatched (Jewish donors to Arab recipients and vice versa). We also compared the survival among the four gender donor and recipient combinations (male to male, female to female, male to female, and female to male). 

Results: Survival analysis revealed no significant differences between the two ancestry groups (P = 0.51) and among the four gender combinations (P = 0.58). On Cox multivariate analysis, younger donor age was the only significant parameter for longer survival (hazards ratio 1.025, 95% confidence interval 1.012–1.037).

Conclusions: Gender and ancestry mismatches in these two Israeli populations do not appear to alter the clinical outcomes following lung transplantation.

 

August 2015
Shimon Izhakian MD and Andreas E. Buchs MD

Background: In Israel, where the "Do not resuscitate code" and "advanced directives" are not yet universally practiced, physicians are frequently ‘forced’ to mechanically ventilate patients despite an upfront unfavorable prognosis. Due to the shortage of intensive care unit (ICU) beds, patients are mostly hospitalized in general medicine wards. 

Objectives: To differentiate between patients with particularly grim prognoses and those with good prognoses, in order to inform the potential decision-making process regarding whether or not to offer aggressive medical care.  

Methods: This retrospective study included all mechanically ventilated patients hospitalized exclusively in one of the six general internal medicine wards at the Assaf Harofeh Medical Center during 2009–2010. Demographic and ventilation-related data, laboratory values and main medical diagnoses were correlated to in-hospital mortality. 

Results: The study group comprised 437 patients with a median age of 83 years. Mortality was 72%. Initiation of mechanical ventilation out of the hospital or in the emergency room improved outcome. Age, anemia, leukocytosis and renal failure correlated negatively to outcome. In-hospital mortality was 80% in patients after in-hospital resuscitation, 90% in patients ventilated due to infections, but 50% in patients ventilated for cardiac or respiratory failure.

Conclusions: The prognosis of mechanically ventilated patients can be foreseen, which could help in deciding whether aggressive life support would be in the interest of the patient. 

 

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