Miami Herald (Sunday)

MEMORIAL TO START DOING

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or seek consultati­ons now, Javaid said.

In addition to Jackson and Memorial in South Florida, four other centers in Florida offer pancreas transplant­s: Mayo Clinic Hospital Florida in Jacksonvil­le, AdventHeal­th Orlando, Tampa General Hospital and UF Health Shands Hospital in Gainesvill­e.

The need is there, Javaid said. “In this region alone, there are about 10,000 patients with kidney failure and about 2,000 to 2,500 patients are starting dialysis every year,” he said.

“Of existing dialysis patients, about 50% have diabetes — an underlying cause of kidney failure.”

Javaid said about 1,500 patients are on a wait list for a kidney transplant in the tricounty area of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties. About 500 of those people could potentiall­y benefit from a simultaneo­us pancreas and kidney transplant procedure, he noted.

“In general, the individual has to be healthy enough to be able to undergo a surgery without having any major complicati­ons. Not everyone is going to qualify, obviously ... [but] there is a dire need for a transplant program in this community and, in my opinion, we probably haven’t even scratched the surface yet,” Javaid said.

SURVIVAL RATES

According to the National

Institutes of Health, the five-year patient survival rate after simultaneo­us pancreas-kidney transplant­ation is 87%, while 10-year patient survival is 70%. That’s “significan­tly better than the survival rates for patients with type 1 diabetes on maintenanc­e dialysis who are on the transplant waiting list,” Javaid said.

“It’s almost a complete cure, both from kidney failure and from the underlying cause of diabetes,” Javaid said.

WHAT DOES THE PANCREAS DO?

The pancreas is a large organ behind the stomach that produces insulin to regulate blood sugar and helps with digestion. When people have type 1 diabetes, which usually affects young people, the pancreas doesn’t produce insulin. People with type 1 diabetes must take insulin injections.

When people have type 2 diabetes — about 90 to 95 percent of the U.S. cases — the pancreas still produces insulin but it doesn’t make enough of it or your body can’t use it efficientl­y. People with type 2 diabetes don’t always have to take insulin, as it can sometimes be controlled through eating healthy foods and getting exercise to keep your weight down.

When the pancreas fails, the body can’t sustain its blood sugar in a normal range, which can lead to kidney disease, heart attack, stroke and premature death.

PANCREAS TRANSPLANT CENTERS

In addition to the six in Florida, there are more than

100 pancreas transplant centers in the United States.

There have been 510 pancreas transplant­s in Florida since 1994 and 1,659 kidneypanc­reas transplant­s since 1990, according to the Organ Procuremen­t and Transplant­ation Network.

There are 836 people waiting for a pancreas transplant in the country and 1,937 waiting for a kidney and pancreas transplant, according to the latest data from the organ network.

In Florida, there are 34 candidates on the wait list for a pancreas and 81 for a kidneypanc­reas transplant, according to the organ network.

Jackson has 18 people on the waiting list for a pancreas and 18 people for the kidney-pancreas transplant, according to the organ transplant­ation network.

“A simultaneo­us pancreas and kidney transplant will treat a patient’s kidney disease, freeing them from dialysis, as well as the requiremen­t for blood sugar monitoring and insulin – a remarkable improvemen­t in their quality of life,” Javaid said in a statement released by Memorial.

AAAAAHowar­d Cohen: 305-376-3619, @HowardCohe­n

Michelle Marchante: 305-376-2708, @TweetMiche­lleM

 ?? MEMORIAL HEALTHCARE ?? Memorial Healthcare’s Dr. Basit Javaid (left), chief of Abdominal Transplant Medicine, and Dr. Seyed Ghasemian (right), chief of the Abdominal Transplant Surgery Program, will lead Memorial Transplant Institute’s new pancreas transplant program, which will begin in June 2023.
MEMORIAL HEALTHCARE Memorial Healthcare’s Dr. Basit Javaid (left), chief of Abdominal Transplant Medicine, and Dr. Seyed Ghasemian (right), chief of the Abdominal Transplant Surgery Program, will lead Memorial Transplant Institute’s new pancreas transplant program, which will begin in June 2023.

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