Kidney Transplant
Definition
A kidney transplant is a surgical procedure in which a healthy kidney from a living or deceased donor is implanted into a patient with end-stage renal disease or chronic kidney failure. The transplanted kidney takes over the function of the patient's failed kidneys, helping to filter waste products and excess fluids from the blood.
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Renal Transplant Care Program
Our program strives to provide optimal access to kidney transplants to individuals for whom this is the best option. We work in coordination with the Yale New Haven Hospital Transplantation Program, which has clinical facilities in New Haven and at Saint Francis Hospital in Hartford, providing easy access to care for patients in Connecticut and western Massachusetts. Our dedicated providers offer direct care and support to patients and donors throughout the pre- and post-transplant periods. We also provide a full range of nephrology consultation services for patients with other organ transplants including heart, liver, and bone marrow. For our patients, we are able to: Expedite donor and recipient evaluation for patients not yet on dialysis. Perform internal exchanges and participate in two national exchange programs for recipients with medically suitable donors willing to consider this option. Schedule a first visit within four weeks of initial referral. Advocate for patients who have exhausted dialysis access to receive emergency transplant listing status. Provide a medical home for our patients with open access to our clinic on an urgent basis.Transplant & Immunology
At Yale Medicine, our experts and caregivers give comprehensive and compassionate treatment for those with end-stage liver, kidney, and pancreas organ failure who might benefit from transplantation. We offer many treatment options and hope for high-risk patients who may have been turned down for transplant elsewhere, in addition full support services. Our expert physicians specialize in anesthesiology, internal medicine, pediatrics, surgery, transplant immunology, kidney diseases, liver diseases, diabetes mellitus, and transplant surgery. Our caring, highly skilled nurses, physician assistants, nutritionists, pharmacists, social workers, and financial counselors further support your needs. Many inherited metabolic liver diseases such as Wilson's disease, Gaucher's disease, lipidosis, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, hemochromatosis, tyrosinemia, and glycogen storage diseases are cured by successful liver transplantation. We specialize in genetic testing for liver diseases and treatments that provide comprehensive care for affected patients. Even though we treat some of the most seriously ill patients, our program's survival rates are consistently higher than the national average. We offer many options for advanced liver disease, including living donor and deceased donor transplantation, liver transplantation in HIV-infected individuals, and pre- and post-transplant antiviral therapy to prevent or treat recurrent hepatitis C. Through our acute liver failure program, we can transfer patients to Yale New Haven Hospital in a timely manner for transplant evaluation and medical management. In collaboration with the hospital’s Medical Intensive Care Unit, we offer innovative techniques such as hypothermia therapy for the treatment of acute liver failure. Pancreatic transplants are less common than kidney or liver transplants and are usually performed in patients with type 1 diabetes. Our physicians perform isolated pancreas transplantation, simultaneous kidney/pancreas transplantation, and pancreas transplantation following kidney transplantation. Specialized care is offered in the following areas: Combined organ transplantation including kidney, kidney/liver, and kidney/heart Comprehensive tissue typing and immune evaluation services Follow-up and psychosocial support Leading-edge treatment options for immunosuppression Liver transplantation, including adult-to-adult living donor, pediatric living donor, and other surgeries Minimally invasive living-donor kidney surgeries Robotic hepatobiliary surgery Surgical therapy of diseases of the liver and biliary systems and end-stage kidney and liver disease Telemedicine via patient portalKidney Disease & Transplant Program
A variety of diseases can affect the health of the kidneys. We care for patients at every stage of kidney disease, offering scientifically proven treatments and a personalized care plan. The Department of Urology is part of the Living Donor Transplant Program at the Yale New Haven Transplantation Center where we care for patients with renal disease who are candidates for kidney transplantation. We have expertise in performing laparoscopic, living-donor nephrectomies, delivering the highest quality care to the kidney donor-patient team at Yale. At Yale Medicine, our patients have full access to leading physicians who can help with all aspects of renal disease. Patients also have access to world-class resources at Smilow Cancer Hospital at Yale New Haven. Our doctors are at the forefront of kidney disease and kidney cancer treatment and research, including novel immunotherapy approaches and the genetic characterization of kidney cancers. In addition, the Yale School of Medicine's Hereditary Kidney Cancer and Genetic Assessment Program investigates potential genetic causes of kidney cancer in young patients, including those with a family history and individuals with multiple tumors, to help family members determine if they carry a risk for kidney cancer.