A new machine which keeps lungs alive outside of the body could "transform" the number of people receiving transplants, surgeons hope.
The breakthrough has come at Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridgeshire after it became the first in the UK to pilot the use of the XPS system.
The machine, nicknamed "lungs in a box", mimics the human body and surgeon Marius Burman said it could increase the number of transplants by 30%.
Daniel Evans-Smith, a 49-year-old event manager from Northampton, was the first to receive a double lung transplant using the system on the NHS and said he was "immensely grateful".