Transplant Living Center
The Transplant Living Center - a network of support and comfort where families can cook together, cry together and ultimately heal together.
The Transplant Living Center - a network of support and comfort where families can cook together, cry together and ultimately heal together.
The majority of patients that receive pancreas transplants have advanced kidney failure as a result of diabetic nephropathy (diabetes-caused kidney damaged), and receive combined kidney/pancreas transplants or pancreas after kidney transplants. Pancreas transplantation is not offered to all diabetic patients because of the risk of side effects associated with life-long use of immunosuppressive medication. Insulin dependent diabetic patients with normal kidney function are considered for pancreatic transplantation alone only if they have life-threatening hypoglycemic unawareness or severe neuropathy.
The goal for pancreas transplantation is to achieve freedom from the use of insulin, to improve the quality of life, and to prevent progression of secondary diabetic complications. Survival rates for both pancreas and kidney/pancreas transplantations at Mount Sinai exceed national averages.
At Mount Sinai we are currently offering the following special programs within the Kidney/Pancreas Transplantation Program:
For personalized assistance accessing any of our programs, support groups and services please contact our Transplant Liaison office.
Nearly 80,000 Americans, including approximately 8,000 New Yorkers, are waiting for a lifesaving transplant. Tens of thousands more await bone, corneal and other tissue transplants.