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The surgeon
most closely identified with the upsurge in controversial living-donor
liver transplants for adult patients has moved to the University
of Pittsburgh Medical Center, his fourth hospital in the past
three years.
Dr. Amadeo
Marcos, 39, left Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester after only
two years. During his stay in Rochester, Strong Memorial performed
more of the still-controversial adult-to-adult liver transplants
in 2001 than any other hospital in the United States.
Marcos had
left Medical College of Virginia, which pioneered adult living-donor
liver transplants in 1998, in the spring of 2000 to become director
of the living-donor liver transplant program at Beth Israel-Deaconess
Medical Center in Boston.
But he left
Beth Israel-Deaconess after only a couple of months to become
director of the transplant program at Strong Memorial.
The University
of Pittsburgh has been one of the more cautious major centers
on the subject of living-donor adult liver transplants, not performing
its first until late 2000.
But Dr. John
Fung, chief of transplantation at Pittsburgh, said "we've
assuaged a lot of the concerns about the ethics and safety,"
and said that with Marcos' arrival, Pittsburgh might perform as
many as 50 in the coming year.
Other
sources: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle,
Boston Herald
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