The Catalyst Issue 28 | November 2017 | Page 14

Marcelo Pando Rigal, PhD (left) and Bruce Kaplan, MD RENEWED HOPE Accelerated efforts and new leadership in transplantation services help extend and increase the quality of life for patients with end-stage organ failure. aylor Scott & White Health has made great strides to become the leading provider of organ transplant services in Central Texas. The transplant program is now set for even greater achievements with the arrival of new clinical and laboratory leadership. Its new leader is Bruce Kaplan, MD, who comes to the health care system from the Mayo Clinic in Arizona. Dr. Kaplan is an international authority in transplant medicine and has over 300 peer- reviewed publications as well as serving as Deputy Editor for the American Journal of Transplantation, the premier journal in transplant. Before his tenure at Mayo Clinic, he led several prestigious transplant institutes and has received more than $40 million in research funding throughout his distinguished career. Dr. Kaplan joins Baylor Scott & White Health – Central Texas as vice president for transplant B 14 THE CATALYST Fall 17 | bswhealth.com services. He arrived in May and has set high goals for the transplant team. “We want to be the most clinically innovative center in Texas and one of the true clinical innovators in the country,” he says. “We also want to be considered the center that treats patients with the greatest compassion and respect.” He has a team in place who share his vision, and is putting together the additional resources to help realize it. A transplant program is a major undertaking for a health system, and requires a large investment. About 100 people make up the support system or the “infrastructure” as Dr. Kaplan calls it. Beyond the surgeons who perform the transplants, the group includes cardiologists, nephrologists and other physicians, coordinators, specialty trained transplant nurses, lab technicians, nutritionists, social workers, financial assistants, and many others. Dr. Kaplan oversees teams of clinicians who provide kidney, pancreas, and heart transplants to patients with end-stage organ failure. Corneal and blood stem cell transplants are also available. The organ transplantation program is expected to grow in the future, driven by innovative initiatives and, hopefully, an increase in organ donations. Providing organ transplant services in Temple offers hope to patients with failing organs, says Department of Surgery Chairman Harry Papaconstantinou, MD. “End- stage organ disease—congestive heart failure, kidney failure, and also chronic diabetes with pancreatic failure—can be very debilitating or even fatal for patients,” he says. “Providing an opportunity for transplantation can actually give people a new lease on life, and can give them a much better quality of life.”