New GW Liver Transplantation Program Performs Inaugural, Multi-Organ Transplant

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The GW Transplant Institute is the newest facility in the District to offer liver transplants.

The George Washington University Transplant Institute’s Liver Transplantation Program and surgeons Stephen Gray and Lynt Johnson recently completed the institute’s first liver transplant.

For the inaugural transplant, the surgical team was faced with a multi-organ procedure, replacing both the patient’s liver and kidney. Read the full story in GW Today.

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New research looks at racial disparities in kidney transplants

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CINCINNATI — African Americans wait two- to four-times longer on transplant waiting lists than whites, according to the Cleveland Clinic. One health center is working to get answers and cut down the wait.

D’On Ingram received an ultrasound as a follow up to his recent kidney transplant—a surgery that was years in the making. Just 10 years ago, doctors diagnosed him with stage three renal failure. Five years later, his kidneys got weaker, and his doctor put him on dialysis.  Read the full story in Spectrum News 1 here.

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A Lifetime of Heart Care Leads to Transplant

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After Coping With Congenital Heart Disease Since Birth, Andrew Solis, 21, Spent Nearly 8 Months at Cedars-Sinai Waiting for His New Heart and Liver

Newswise — LOS ANGELES — (June 13, 2022) — While many 21-year-olds celebrate their coming of age in bars and nightclubs, Andrew Solis is celebrating freedom by finally going home—equipped with a new heart and liver—after nearly eight months at Cedars-Sinai. 

“Before my heart and liver transplant, I was stuck in the hospital, feeling weak, anxious and stressed,” said Solis, a Long Beach resident who was born with a heart condition. “Now, with my new organs, I feel great—like a new person. I feel really grateful and blessed for the wonderful team that has been behind me.” Read the full story in News Wise here.

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My Post-transplant Life Is Well Worth the Cost

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Almost 30 hours after my bilateral lung transplant, it was time for me to be extubated and take my first solo breath with my new lungs. My wife, Susan, was at my bedside, along with several nurses.

In a video of that day last July, you can hear Susan ask me if I’m ready to have the tube removed. I shook my head no.

But once the nurses removed the tube, an almost immediate calm came over me. I could breathe. Read more in Pulmonary Fibrosis News.

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Unexplained hepatitis is not more common in U.S. children than before the pandemic, a C.D.C. study suggests.

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Officials have also been trying to determine whether the cases represent a new phenomenon or are simply a new recognition of one that has long existed; there have always been a subset of pediatric hepatitis cases with no clear cause.

cluster of cases of severe hepatitis, or liver inflammation, in previously healthy children, which date back to October 2021.  Read the full story in The New York Times.

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Liver Preserved for 3 Days With Machine Perfusion Successfully Transplanted

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— Patient healthy and leading normal life at 1 year

A patient who underwent transplant with a liver that was preserved for 3 days outside of the body using warm machine perfusion was healthy and leading a normal life at 1 year, according to researchers from Switzerland.

The recipient experienced only minimal graft injury with normal bilirubin levels and a small release of liver enzymes within the first week after receiving the graft via ex situ normothermic preservation (peak alanine transaminase [ALT] 138 UL-1 and peak aspartate aminotransferase [AST] 309 UL-1), reported Pierre-Alain Clavien, MD, of University Hospital Zurich, and colleagues. Read more in MedPage Today.

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Transplant society president calls for more collaborative efforts to increase organ supply

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The transplant community, HHS and procurement organizations need to work collaboratively to increase the organ supply for transplantation in the United States, according to remarks made at the American Transplant Congress.

“We need more than symbolic gestures from our elected officials if we are going to meet the crisis of end-stage organ failure that kills patients at a rate of 17 per day [on the waitlist] in the U.S.,” John Gill, MD, outgoing president of the American Society of Transplantation (AST), said during his address. Read more in Healio here.

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Transplant Journey – Music Playlist

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We recently put out a call to the transplant community for recommendations of songs that have been impactful during your transplant journey. As always, you didn’t disappoint! We heard from folks across the country who shared songs and some brief descriptions of how they helped them through some time times. Check out their recommendations and see the complete playlist here.

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Doctors Take Out Patient’s Damaged Liver, Transplant It Back After Treating It

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Doctors in Switzerland have successfully removed a cancer patient’s damaged liver before transplanting it back into his body after having treated the organ in a machine for three days.

The multidisciplinary Liver4Life team at the University Hospital Zurich (USZ) has claimed that the procedure is the first of its kind in the world and they credited their in-house perfusion machine with making the feat possible. Read the full story in Newsweek here.

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