The day Royal Papworth Hospital made history was celebrated this week, marking 40 years since their first heart transplant.

On January 14 1979, a 44-year-old underwent the operation having spent a prolonged time in hospital with advanced heart disease.

The recipient died 17 days later after developing a brain injury, but the effect of providing a patient in terminal heart failure with a normal functioning heart had been shown.

The very first heart transplant in the UK took place at the National Heart Hospital in May 1968 and was the tenth in the world at the time but was unsuccessful.

Papworth Hospital, currently based at Papworth Everard is set to move to a state-of-the-art facility on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus during spring of this year.

Ely Standard: Royal Papworth Hospital is celebrating 40 years since its first successful heart transplant from 1979. Picture: FACEBOOK / BBCRoyal Papworth Hospital is celebrating 40 years since its first successful heart transplant from 1979. Picture: FACEBOOK / BBC (Image: FACEBOOK / BBC)

With survival rates failing to improve, heart transplants were stopped in the UK and around most of the world until 1979 when Papworth Hospital joined only a handful of other centres in the world performing heart transplantation.

Dr Clive Lewis, heart transplant expert, said: “Celebrating 40 years of heart transplantation at Royal Papworth is a fantastic achievement, especially given the difficulties Sir Terence English encountered in those early days.

“Royal Papworth achieves the highest UK outcomes after transplant in the short and long-term, which has brought many years of happy lives to so many patients and their families.

“We should also remember the amazing gift of life given by so many donor families during the most difficult circumstances.”

A few days before the 40th anniversary, Royal Papworth reached another significant landmark, with its 1,500th patient receiving a heart transplant.

And not only does Royal Papworth have one of the longest-running heart transplant programmes, it is also one of the most successful, with the highest UK survival rate.

“Now, as then, Papworth continues to be a centre of excellence with a pioneering spirit,” Dr Lewis added.

“The development and success of the DCD (Donation after Circulatory Death) heart programme, the largest in the world, is testament to that.

“This programme has enabled more than 50 patients to receive hearts from donors which would otherwise not have been used, resulting in an increase in the number of transplants per year by a third.”

Later in the year, in August, it will mark 40 years since Royal Papworth’s second heart transplant patient was treated.

Keith Castle lived for more than five years after the operation, which was performed by Sir Terence English, making it the UK’s first heart transplant with long-term success.

Four of the first six patients went on to live for between three to eight years.