BSWH Transplant Annual Report 2016 ACHC_639_2017_AnnualReport_JO_PROOF8 | Page 7

In 2016, our program continued to thrive: • Clinic visits of abdominal and heart/lung transplant patients increased 10 percent. • Five new transplant surgeons and physician specialists joined the Baylor Dallas transplant program. • The comprehensive STARS transplant patient database — a central repository for abdominal and cardiothoracic clinical data — and the Transplant Biorepository — a bank of serum and cells from previous transplant recipients and donors that have been collected and stored since the program’s inception in 1984 — both expanded. This is a priceless resource that does not exist anywhere else in the world. 450 patients at Baylor Dallas and Baylor Scott & White - Fort Worth (combined) received transplants. A record number for the institute. Five new transplant surgeons and physician specialists joined the Baylor Dallas transplant program in 2016. 450 5 The importance of managing the disease process for transplant patients received laser-focused attention in 2016. Unified by the idea that transplant is the treatment of last resort, physicians working in tandem with outpatient clinics provided the insight, technology and expertise to help patients with chronic illnesses stay as healthy as possible before progressing to the point of requiring a transplant. The foundation has been laid to propel the Baylor Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute into an exciting future. New treatment options, enhanced approaches to care and improved experiences for patients are right around the corner. There’s never been a better time to be involved in the life-changing work of transplantation. 10 % Clinic visits of abdominal and heart/lung transplant patients increased 10 percent. Nationally, organ transplantation increased 8.5 percent in 2016. 5