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Transplants

UT Southwestern Medical Center is a leading transplant center and has received numerous awards as well as recognition for its excellence in research, education and patient care.

Through state-of-the-art facilities and highly experienced personnel, the UT Southwestern transplant programs have established an exceptional track record. For example:

  • The heart transplant program has a one-year survival rate of 91.3 percent and a three-year survival rate of 89.7 percent, which is 10 percent higher than the national average.*
  • The lung transplant program has achieved a 100 percent survival rate compared to an average of 83.6 percent for all other centers in the nation for one-year post-transplant survival of double lung transplant patients.*
  • The bone marrow transplant program is actively investigating a new method of transplantation that de-emphasizes the toxic effects of high-dose chemotherapy and radiation therapy while emphasizing the powerful anti-cancer effects of donor immune cells. This treatment has resulted in complete and ongoing remissions in many patients with otherwise incurable malignancies.
  • The kidney transplant physicians are responsible for a number of innovations that have become nationally accepted practice.
  • The liver transplant program provides comprehensive medical and surgical care for patients with end-stage liver disease requiring liver transplantation. The world-renowned team of surgeons and specialists can manage all aspects of the liver transplant process and provides a multi-disciplinary approach to patient care.

UT Southwestern's specialists also provide the ongoing medical management and care needed for patients who are waiting for a transplant as well as for those who have already received a transplant.

The collaborative efforts of physicians, nursing coordinators, social workers and other counselors enables UT Southwestern's transplant programs to provide excellent care to every patient.

*For transplants performed between July. 1, 2003, and Dec. 31, 2005, for one-year data. For transplants performed between July. 1, 2001, and Dec. 31, 2003, for three-year data according to ustransplant.org.