For more than 40 years, the transplant experts at University Health Transplant Institute have been giving Texans — and people from across the nation — a new lease on life with life-saving surgeries.
Choose high-quality care from experienced, recognized professionals when selecting a transplant hospital. Explore our robust kidney, liver and lung services, and discover the advantages of getting your transplant care at University Health Transplant Institute.
Celebrating 6,500 Transplants
The University Health transplant specialists are no strangers to setting milestones. In 1987, we performed the first heart and double-lung transplant in South Texas, and we’ve been changing lives ever since.
In 2020, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, an all-female transplant team performed the 5,000th transplant at University Health’s Transplant Institute. Fourteen-year-old Hayes Atkins experienced lifelong kidney issues and received a living kidney donation from his mother, making him the 5,000th transplant patient at our hospital. Hayes and his family join a community of people who have received life-saving care at University Health Transplant Institute.
Since Hayes’s surgery, our team has reached the 6,500-transplant surgery milestone. With every family we serve, we continue to set the standard for transplant care.
Achieving Better Transplant Care
We are proud to offer:
- Among the best kidney and liver transplant and survival rates in Texas, exceeding national standards
- The most experienced lung transplant program in South Texas
- Coordinated, streamlined paired liver and kidney donations
- Robust living donor transplant programs
- Champion for Life program
- Minimally invasive, precise da Vinci® Robotic Surgical System option for some liver and kidney transplant surgeries
Nationally Recognized Nursing Care
Magnet Award
You’ll get the best nursing care available from our Magnet®-recognized health care system. Magnet nurses at University Health are skilled professionals who provide high-quality care, save lives and improve patient outcomes. This prestigious recognition from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) is the gold standard in measuring nursing excellence.
Accredited Cancer Care
If you have cancer and your best treatment option is an organ transplant, feel confident you’ll have access to expert cancer and transplant doctors and surgeons and improved outcomes.
Count on a wide range of superior cancer services at University Health because the accredits our programs. That means we can diagnose, treat, rehabilitate and support patients with cancer and their families. CoC accreditation is the hallmark of our program’s commitment to patient-centered cancer care.
The Joint Commission-Certified Palliative Care
If you need supportive care during your transplant journey, rest assured you’ll get exceptional patient and family-centered care to enhance your quality of life. We are one of only six health systems in Texas to achieve the , the national accrediting body for hospitals.
Centers of Excellence
Recognition as a Center of Excellence (COE) requires expertise, following a comprehensive evaluation process, value and a track record of excellence in treating complex medical conditions.
University Health’s kidney, liver and lung transplant programs are Centers of Excellence for several major health plans and organizations, including:
- Aetna
- Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas
- Blue Cross Blue Shield Association
- Bridges to Excellence
- Children’s Hospital Association
- Cigna Life Source
- OptumHealth
- Superior Health Plan Insurance
- LifeTrac
Increasing Organ Transplant Access Model
This kidney transplant hospital has been selected by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to participate in the Increasing Organ Transplant Access (IOTA) Model. The IOTA Model aims to increase access to life-saving transplants for patients living with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and reduce Medicare expenditures.
1988 – First lung transplant in North America to treat emphysema
1989 – First lung transplant in the world to treat pulmonary hypertension
1995 – First kidney-pancreas transplant at a civilian hospital
1997 – First civilian split-liver transplant in South Texas
1999 – First laparoscopic kidney donor surgery in San Antonio and first adult-to-adult living-donor liver transplant in South Texas
2003 – First University Health outreach clinics open in Corpus Christi, El Paso and the Rio Grande Valley
2008 – First paired donation at University Health Transplant Center
2009 – First living-donor chain at University Health Transplant Center