Since its inception, the Baylor Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute has performed more than 7,850 abdominal transplants.

The Abdominal Transplant Surgery Fellowship program with Baylor Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute at Baylor University Medical Center, part of Baylor Scott & White Health, is approved by the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS) to train in liver, kidney and pancreas transplantation, and hepato-pancreato-biliary (HPB) surgery.

The two-year program is designed to provide a board-certified or board-eligible general surgeon (or the equivalent) with a broad, multifaceted education in abdominal transplantation, including the preoperative evaluation, intraoperative management and postoperative care of the transplant recipient, and complex HPB surgery.

We accept one surgery fellow per year.

Why Baylor Scott & White Health

As the largest not-for-profit health care system in Texas and one of the largest in the United States, Baylor Scott & White serves 41 counties through 52 hospitals, more than 1,200 access points, more than 7,100 active physicians, more than 52,000 team members and the Baylor Scott & White Health Plan.

Curriculum

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  • Teaching Research

    Teaching Research

    Our multifaceted teaching is provided during formal rounds, didactic sessions, oral examinations, web tutorials and weekly transplant surgery conferences, which includes a monthly journal club, division morbidity and mortality and invited lecturers.

    Fellows are encouraged to participate in clinical research including retrospective chart reviews and prospective clinical studies. They are responsible for the inception, planning, implementation, presentation and manuscript phases of research projects..

  • Renal Transplantation

    Renal Transplantation

    Pre-renal transplant patients are worked up by nephrologists on the medical staff. These cases are presented at the weekly kidney transplant selection committee for approval. The committee consists of transplant surgeons, nephrologists, social workers, transplant coordinators and other consultants.

    After the kidney transplant, the recipient is under the primary care of the transplant surgical team.

    Fellows participate in:

    • Donor offer evaluation
    • Evaluation and admission of the pre-renal transplant recipients
    • The kidney transplant
    • Intensive care management
    • Basic medical management
    • Immunosuppression management
    • Diagnosis and management of surgical complications
    • Evaluation of post-renal transplant patients with potential surgical complications

    Fellows' surgical responsibilities for kidney transplantation include:

    • Completing a kidney transplant as primary surgeon
    • Completing the number of kidney transplants as described by American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS) certification guidelines (40 cases)
    • Participating in deceased donor renal procurements
    • Becoming familiar with and using renal perfusion pumps
    • Performing workup and operative management of post-kidney transplant complications
  • Liver Donor Renal Transplantation

    Liver Donor Renal Transplantation

    Living donor renal transplantation makes up nearly a quarter of the kidney transplants performed. All donor nephrectomies are performed robotically.

    Fellows are expected to learn and eventually perform living donor nephrectomies (ASTS requires fellows to perform 12 cases)

  • Liver Transplantation

    Liver Transplantation

    Candidates for liver transplantation are evaluated by fellow and transplant surgeon. Cases are discussed at the weekly meetings of the liver transplant selection committee, which consists of transplant surgeons, hepatologists, and other specialists on the hospital’s medical staff, along with social workers and transplant coordinators.

    Fellows participate in the admission and workup of patients at the time of surgery. After transplant, Fellows continue to care for the post-liver transplant recipient in all aspects of his/her medical and surgical needs.

    Surgical responsibilities include:

    • Completion of a liver transplant
    • Completion of the number of liver transplants to achieve ASTS certification for liver transplant (45 cases)
    • Pre- and post-transplant ICU medical and surgical management
    • Performing deceased donor liver procurements (both DBD and DCD)
    • Participation and performing robotic live donor hepatectomies
    • Diagnosis and management of surgical complications after liver transplant
    • Diagnosis and management of surgical complications after living donor hepatectomy

    Intensive Care Unit


    Intensive care unit management of the liver transplant patient is intense and complex. Fellows take the lead in the management of the patient’s care, together with the intensivist team:

    • Fluid and transfusion management
    • Immunosuppression management
    • Ventilator management
    • Management of vasoactive agents
    • Interpretation of PA catheter data
    • Medical management

    Inpatient Care


    Inpatient liver transplant care also is provided by fellows, who are involved in all patient care until discharge. The basics of inpatient management include:

    • Fluid/diuretic management
    • Immunosuppression management
    • Analysis of liver function tests
    • Diagnosing rejection
    • Management of co-morbid conditions
    • Workup of infectious causes

    Outpatient Care


    Fellows also see patients in the outpatient clinic. Patients may require readmission for infection, rejection or observation. Transplant patients are seen by the surgical team for 6 weeks postop and as needed thereafter. Fellows learn to perform bedside liver biopsies and interpret results of the follow-up studies.

  • Pancreas Transplantation

    Pancreas Transplantation

    Fellows participate in and learn about donor and recipient selection for pancreas transplantation.

    Fellows' surgical responsibilities for pancreas transplantation include:

    • Completing a pancreas transplant as primary surgeon
    • Completing the number of pancreas transplants as described by American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS) certification guidelines (10 cases), backtable (10 cases), and pancreas procurements (10 cases)
    • Performing deceased donor pancreas procurements
    • Performing workup and operative management of post-pancreas transplant complications
  • Organ Procurement

    Organ Procurement

    Deceased donor procurements are completed by fellows and a supervising transplant surgeon. Fellows are expected to become the primary surgeon on the organ and tissue procurement and preservation team. Livers, kidneys and pancreases are the principal organs procuremented.

    Fellows gain experience in:

    • Deceased donor whole liver transplant
    • Deceased donor kidney procurement
    • Deceased donor pancreas procurement (for whole organ)
    • Multiorgan procurement in donation after circulatory death (DCD)
    • Use of perfusion technologies including NRP & NMP

Teaching Research

Our multifaceted teaching is provided during formal rounds, didactic sessions, oral examinations, web tutorials and weekly transplant surgery conferences, which includes a monthly journal club, division morbidity and mortality and invited lecturers.

Fellows are encouraged to participate in clinical research including retrospective chart reviews and prospective clinical studies. They are responsible for the inception, planning, implementation, presentation and manuscript phases of research projects..

Renal Transplantation

Pre-renal transplant patients are worked up by nephrologists on the medical staff. These cases are presented at the weekly kidney transplant selection committee for approval. The committee consists of transplant surgeons, nephrologists, social workers, transplant coordinators and other consultants.

After the kidney transplant, the recipient is under the primary care of the transplant surgical team.

Fellows participate in:

  • Donor offer evaluation
  • Evaluation and admission of the pre-renal transplant recipients
  • The kidney transplant
  • Intensive care management
  • Basic medical management
  • Immunosuppression management
  • Diagnosis and management of surgical complications
  • Evaluation of post-renal transplant patients with potential surgical complications

Fellows' surgical responsibilities for kidney transplantation include:

  • Completing a kidney transplant as primary surgeon
  • Completing the number of kidney transplants as described by American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS) certification guidelines (40 cases)
  • Participating in deceased donor renal procurements
  • Becoming familiar with and using renal perfusion pumps
  • Performing workup and operative management of post-kidney transplant complications

Liver Donor Renal Transplantation

Living donor renal transplantation makes up nearly a quarter of the kidney transplants performed. All donor nephrectomies are performed robotically.

Fellows are expected to learn and eventually perform living donor nephrectomies (ASTS requires fellows to perform 12 cases)

Liver Transplantation

Candidates for liver transplantation are evaluated by fellow and transplant surgeon. Cases are discussed at the weekly meetings of the liver transplant selection committee, which consists of transplant surgeons, hepatologists, and other specialists on the hospital’s medical staff, along with social workers and transplant coordinators.

Fellows participate in the admission and workup of patients at the time of surgery. After transplant, Fellows continue to care for the post-liver transplant recipient in all aspects of his/her medical and surgical needs.

Surgical responsibilities include:

  • Completion of a liver transplant
  • Completion of the number of liver transplants to achieve ASTS certification for liver transplant (45 cases)
  • Pre- and post-transplant ICU medical and surgical management
  • Performing deceased donor liver procurements (both DBD and DCD)
  • Participation and performing robotic live donor hepatectomies
  • Diagnosis and management of surgical complications after liver transplant
  • Diagnosis and management of surgical complications after living donor hepatectomy

Intensive Care Unit


Intensive care unit management of the liver transplant patient is intense and complex. Fellows take the lead in the management of the patient’s care, together with the intensivist team:

  • Fluid and transfusion management
  • Immunosuppression management
  • Ventilator management
  • Management of vasoactive agents
  • Interpretation of PA catheter data
  • Medical management

Inpatient Care


Inpatient liver transplant care also is provided by fellows, who are involved in all patient care until discharge. The basics of inpatient management include:

  • Fluid/diuretic management
  • Immunosuppression management
  • Analysis of liver function tests
  • Diagnosing rejection
  • Management of co-morbid conditions
  • Workup of infectious causes

Outpatient Care


Fellows also see patients in the outpatient clinic. Patients may require readmission for infection, rejection or observation. Transplant patients are seen by the surgical team for 6 weeks postop and as needed thereafter. Fellows learn to perform bedside liver biopsies and interpret results of the follow-up studies.

Pancreas Transplantation

Fellows participate in and learn about donor and recipient selection for pancreas transplantation.

Fellows' surgical responsibilities for pancreas transplantation include:

  • Completing a pancreas transplant as primary surgeon
  • Completing the number of pancreas transplants as described by American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS) certification guidelines (10 cases), backtable (10 cases), and pancreas procurements (10 cases)
  • Performing deceased donor pancreas procurements
  • Performing workup and operative management of post-pancreas transplant complications

Organ Procurement

Deceased donor procurements are completed by fellows and a supervising transplant surgeon. Fellows are expected to become the primary surgeon on the organ and tissue procurement and preservation team. Livers, kidneys and pancreases are the principal organs procuremented.

Fellows gain experience in:

  • Deceased donor whole liver transplant
  • Deceased donor kidney procurement
  • Deceased donor pancreas procurement (for whole organ)
  • Multiorgan procurement in donation after circulatory death (DCD)
  • Use of perfusion technologies including NRP & NMP

How to apply

We use the Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS) to electronically accept fellowship applications, letters of recommendations, dean’s letters, transcripts and other credentials directly from your medical school.


Visit ERAS® to apply now


Application requirements

The Abdominal Transplant Surgery Match is administered by the SF Match. ASTS sponsors the matching process. SF Match’s Central Application Service (CAS) distributes complete applications to programs electronically. The use of CAS is mandatory for both programs and applicants.



Learn more about Baylor Scott & White's housestaff appointment eligibility, including guidelines for international medical graduates.

Our commitment to our Medical Education community

Baylor University Medical Center, Graduate Medical Education (GME) is committed to passionately promoting a training environment where all feel welcomed and valued. A culture of belonging fosters innovation and is a catalyst for building dynamic teams that serve our communities.

Train at a nationally recognized major teaching hospital

Baylor University Medical Center, part of Baylor Scott & White Health, is a major patient care, teaching and research center providing quaternary care to Dallas, the Southwest region and patients seeking specialized care from around the world.

Working at Baylor Scott & White Health

Stipend and benefits

In addition to competitive stipends, we offer our residents a full menu of employee benefits. We help offset the cost of many of these benefits; others are options you can choose to pay for yourself.

Well-being resources

This time in your professional career can be extremely challenging. As a Baylor Scott & White graduate medical trainee, there are a variety of resources available to you, ensuring you get the most out of your educational experience.

Life in Dallas

Dallas provides access to metropolitan entertainment and culture while maintaining the lowest cost of living among the top 10 largest U.S. cities.

Contact us

Preston Leger
Program Administrator
Phone: 214.820.4543
Email: Preston.Leger@BSWHealth.org

Verification Requests: BUMCGMEVerifications@BSWHealth.org

Abdominal Transplant Surgery Fellowship
Baylor University Medical Center
3535 Worth Street
T. Boone Pickens C2.200
Dallas, TX 75246

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