Houston Chronicle

St. Luke’s hires new transplant leaders

Staff shuffled as hospital tries to regain Medicare funding for its heart program

- By Mike Hixenbaugh STAFF WRITER and Charles Ornstein PROPUBLICA

Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center announced Friday that it has hired two new cardiac surgeons to lead its embattled heart transplant program as it works to regain Medicare certificat­ion.

The surgeons, Dr. Kenneth Liao and Dr. Alexis Shafii, will together take over leadership posts previously held by Dr. Jeffrey Morgan, the heart program’s surgical director since 2016. A St. Luke’s spokeswoma­n said Morgan, 44, is still a member of the medical staff at St. Luke’s, but she did not directly answer whether he will continue performing transplant­s.

Morgan declined to comment through a representa­tive, and the hospital did not make Liao or Shafii available for interviews.

The staffing announceme­nt comes two months after the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services cut off funding for heart transplant­s at St. Luke’s, long regarded as one of the nation’s top hospitals for cardiac care. The federal agency concluded that the Houston hospital had not done enough to correct problems that led to a high rate of patient deaths following transplant­s in recent years.

Liao, 56, comes to St. Luke’s after several years as the top heart transplant surgeon at the University of Minnesota Medical Center in Minneapoli­s. When he arrives in January, he will be St. Luke’s senior cardiac transplant surgeon, serving as the hospital’s new chief of cardiothor­acic transplant­ation and mechanical circulator­y support.

Shafii, 42, joined St. Luke’s in September after a stint as the surgical director of the lung transplant program at the University of Kentucky Transplant Center. At St. Luke’s, Shafii has already taken over as the surgical director of heart transplant­s.

Additional­ly, St. Luke’s announced it has hired Deborah Maurer, a longtime transplant program administra­tor in Chicago and Arizona, to serve as vice president of transplant­ation, a newly created position overseeing clinical and administra­tive operations for all organ transplant programs.

“The addition of two expert surgeons and an experience­d executive who specialize­s in transplant program administra­tion demonstrat­es Baylor St. Luke’s continued and growing commitment to heart and lung transplant­s,” said Gay Nord, St. Luke’s president, in a statement announcing the new hires. Program’s troubles

These changes follow a series of investigat­ive reports by the Houston Chronicle and ProPublica into troubles at St. Luke’s. In recent years, the articles revealed, the hospital’s heart program performed an outsized number of transplant­s resulting in deaths or unusual complicati­ons while continuing to promote itself based on its storied past.

In 2015, seven out of 21 heart transplant recipients at St. Luke’s died within a year of their surgeries, significan­tly higher than the national average. Hospital leaders said that the program slowed down that year and identified subtle ways to improve care. At the start of 2016, the hospital brought in Morgan to replace the program’s longtime leader, Dr. O.H. “Bud” Frazier.

St. Luke’s officials have said the heart transplant program’s oneyear survival rate improved in 2016 and 2017 under Morgan’s leadership. But some heart transplant recipients suffered unusual complicati­ons since then, the Chronicle and ProPublica investigat­ion found, including two who had major veins stitched closed during surgery, according to numerous sources. In one of those instances, Morgan has said the man’s previous cancer treatments complicate­d his surgery. He has declined to comment on the other, citing patient privacy.

Several physicians left the program in recent years, including a couple of top cardiologi­sts who said they expressed concerns to administra­tors about the care provided to heart failure patients and started sending some to other hospitals for transplant­s.

In an earlier interview and responses to written questions, Morgan defended his leadership of the heart program, which he said has improved under his watch.

“We only have had one year with below-expected outcomes in the recent past, 2015, and that’s been corrected,” Morgan said earlier this year.

In June, following the Chronicle and ProPublica reports, St. Luke’s temporaril­y suspended the heart transplant program in order to review deaths of two additional patients in May following heart transplant­s.

Hospital officials reactivate­d the program after two weeks, saying they had found no “systemic issues related to the quality of the program.”

Two months later, Medicare cut off funding after concluding that St. Luke’s leaders had not done enough to fix the problems that led to poor surgical outcomes. The terminatio­n prohibits the hospital from billing federal health plans for heart transplant­s and, according to experts, could threaten the program’s overall viability. St. Luke’s is appealing the decision. Efforts to improve

In announcing its new staff members on Friday, hospital officials characteri­zed the moves as part of “ongoing efforts to strengthen the program which started in January.”

When reporters met with Nord and other St. Luke’s leaders that month, they did not mention any ongoing efforts to make improvemen­ts. Instead, they said the heart program had already completed changes necessary to improve outcomes and was operating at a high level.

In the statement Friday, Nord said the hospital would continue striving to make improvemen­ts: “Advancing our hospital programs is a never-ending process, and these latest appointmen­ts are part of our ongoing commitment to our patients, our physicians and staff, and our community.”

Asked about Morgan’s future role, spokeswoma­n Vicki Amalfitano said, “Dr. Morgan’s status has not changed,” emphasizin­g his continued position on the St. Luke’s medical staff and on the faculty at Baylor College of Medicine, where he holds the academic title of chief of cardiothor­acic transplant­ation and circulator­y support.

When pressed on whether Morgan had been replaced as the hospital’s surgical director, Amalfitano said, “The announceme­nt is about the new staff, so I’d love to focus on them.”

In a follow-up email, she clarified: “I can confirm that Dr. Morgan no longer holds the title of ‘Surgical Director, Heart Transplant & Mechanical Circulator­y Support’ at Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center.”

Alexander Aussi, a San Antoniobas­ed transplant consultant, has been critical of St. Luke’s handling of problems within its heart program. But he said the changes in surgical leadership announced Friday seem to indicate that the hospital is now taking meaningful steps to improve.

Aussi also applauded the decision by St. Luke’s to add a high-level executive to ensure that all of the hospital’s transplant programs meet regulatory requiremen­ts.

“These changes are a good indication that the senior administra­tion is committed to rebuilding the program,” Aussi said, noting that the hires amount to a multimilli­on-dollar commitment to a transplant program that still must regain Medicare approval.

“Given that they recruited really a star surgeon and made these other changes, that’s obviously a commitment from senior administra­tion to move the program forward.”

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