Organ Transplant at Columbia

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The development of organ transplantation has been one of the greatest advances of modern medicine, but that doesn’t make the prospect of needing a transplant any less daunting. Our transplant programs are here to help you or your loved one navigate every step of the transplantation process. We’re here to answer your questions, provide you with support, and of course give you access to the best clinical care possible, from the most experienced and accomplished organ transplant doctors and surgeons in the world. At Columbia, you can count on us to take care of you, no matter your needs.

Transplant Programs

We perform thousands of transplants each year, including unique multi-organ procedures. Because of the experience and skill of our physicians, we can take on even the most complicated of cases—with results that put us among the top in the field.

Within all our transplant programs is a culture dedicated to research and innovation that’s constantly trying to come up with better solutions to improve long-term care. Our goal isn’t just to save lives, it’s to make those lives better.

Liver Transplant Program

Our liver transplant program gives patients the very best in comprehensive liver care. Built from the ground up with a multidisciplinary team, we can diagnose and provide treatment for any kind of liver condition, for both children and adults. If transplant surgery is needed, patients have access to the largest living donor liver program in the city, as well as a roster of highly experienced liver transplant surgeons.

Liver Transplant Program

Program Details

Contact: (877) LIVER MD / 548-3763
Director: Tomoaki Kato, MD

Heart Transplant Program

For over 30 years, advanced heart failure patients have turned to our heart transplant program for the most effective and innovative treatments. Our team performs more transplants than almost any other program in the country and has invented multiple devices and techniques to extend and improve the lives of our patients.

Heart Program

Program Details

Contact: (212) 305-7600
Director: Koji Takeda, MD, PhD

Kidney and Pancreas Transplant Program

Our kidney and pancreas transplant program is one of the longest running and busiest programs in the country, as well as a significant national research center. Our multidisciplinary team takes care of patients who have a variety of end-stage kidney diseases, giving them a wide range of options for treatment. Thanks to our research advances, our patients get access to an expanded donor pool and reduced waiting time for organs.

Kidney Program

Pancreas Program

Program Details

Contact: (212) 305-6469
Director: Lloyd E. Ratner, MD, MPH, FACS

Lung Transplant Program

Patients with advanced lung disease need special attention and care. Fortunately, our lung transplant team has more experience and higher success rates than other programs, as well as an unparalleled history of innovation. Since the program was restructured in 2001, it has grown to become one of the largest in the United States, performing over 1,000 lung transplants. Our doctors have dramatically improved the care of our patients through new immunosuppressive agents, new antibiotics, refined surgical techniques, and a more comprehensive understanding of follow-up care. As a result, our patients are living longer and healthier lives than ever before.

Lung Transplant Program

Program Details

Contact: (212) 305-7771
Director: Philippe LeMaitre, MD, PhD 

The Transplant Forum

Transplant research is where the most exciting innovations for our patients begin. To get more support for this research, we created the Transplant Forum. Made up of a diverse group of scientists, clinicians, patients, and families who are committed to improving the outcomes of transplant surgeries, this initiative raises critical funding for all of our transplant programs and also encourages others to give the gift of life through organ donation.

Learn More About the Transplant Forum

Transplant at Columbia: A Rich History

When Keith Reemtsma, M.D., became chairman of Columbia’s Surgery Department in 1971, surgery was seen as mostly a destructive discipline: it involved incisions, excisions, and amputation. Dr. Reemtsma had other ideas. After spearheading pioneering advances in heart and kidney transplantation in the 1960s (including chimpanzee-to-human transplants), Dr. Reemtsma wanted to build a surgery program that emphasized reconstruction, repair, replacement, and renewal.

This vision effectively kickstarted our organ transplant program. We began by performing kidney transplants, building the first transplant program run by a multidisciplinary team of both surgeons and medical kidney specialists. This led to breakthroughs in immunogenetics and immunosuppression, as well as the treatment of autoimmune diseases and lymphoma. All of our transplant services are now modeled after this multidisciplinary approach.

Other early initiatives include our heart transplant program, which performed one of the first successful pediatric heart transplants in 1984, as well as our lung transplant program, which began in 1985 and was rejuvenated in 2001 with a new multidisciplinary structure. Both of these have since gone on to introduce a string of improvements to patient care that have helped extend long-term survival rates. Then there’s our liver transplant program, which has been a leader in developing the practice of living donor surgery. As a result, our patients are 10 times more likely to receive a liver transplant than at other hospitals. We’ve also gone on to introduce one of New York’s only pancreas transplant programs, giving patients with severe diabetes an essential lifeline.

All this work has helped make us a premier destination for transplant surgery. But after 50 years of transplant innovations, our work still continues. We are actively conducting research across all areas of transplantation. The future of our program may well lay not in the transplantation of organs, but in the transplantation of cells, which have the potential to regenerate damaged tissue and eliminate the need for surgery altogether.

Transplant Leadership Team

Each one of our organ transplant programs is led by doctors who have been recognized for their skill, experience, and compassion. For more information, click through to read their bios or view their contact information.

Executive Leadership

Jean C. Emond, MD
Chief of Transplantation
Executive Director, Transplant Initiative
 

Liver Transplant Leadership

Tomoaki Kato, MD
Chief, Division of Abdominal Organ Transplantation
Surgical Director, Liver and Gastrointestinal Transplantation 

Lorna M. Dove, MD, MPH
Chief, Division of Clinical Hepatology
 

Steven J. Lobritto, MD
Medical Director, Pediatric Liver Transplantation
 
 

Heart Transplant Leadership

Koji Takeda, MD, PhD
Director, Cardiac Transplant
 

Nir Uriel, MD, MSc
Medical Director
 
 

Kidney and Pancreas Transplant Leadership

Lloyd E. Ratner, MD, MPH, FACS
Director, Renal and Pancreatic Transplantation
 

David J. Cohen, MD
Medical Director
 
 

Lung and Heart-Lung Transplant Leadership

Image:
Dr Philippe LeMaitre

Philippe LeMaitre, MD, PhD 
Surgical Director, Lung Transplant Program
 

Selim M. Arcasoy, MD
Medical Program Director

 

Resources and Guides

We want you to stay informed and up to date so you can feel prepared for your or your loved one’s surgery. Explore the following resources to educate yourself.

Program Guides 

Other Resources

Contact Us

We are always eager to answer your questions or help you schedule an appointment. You can contact individual programs using the following information:

  • Liver Transplant Program: (877) LIVER MD / 548-3763
  • Heart Transplant Program: (212) 305-7600
  • Kidney and Pancreas Program: (212) 305-6469
  • Lung Transplant Program: (212) 305-7771