Volume 27, Issue 11 pp. 1120-1124
Original Article

Loss of liver transplant surgeons into alternate career paths

Michael Thomas

Michael Thomas

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

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Martin Angele

Martin Angele

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

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Manfred Stangl

Manfred Stangl

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

Transplant Center, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

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Markus Rentsch

Markus Rentsch

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

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Sebastian Pratschke

Sebastian Pratschke

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

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Joachim Andrassy

Joachim Andrassy

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

Transplant Center, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

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Karl-Walter Jauch

Karl-Walter Jauch

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

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Markus Guba

Corresponding Author

Markus Guba

Department of Surgery, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

Transplant Center, University of Munich, Großhadern, Germany

Correspondence

Prof. Dr. med. Markus Guba,

Klinik für Allgemeine-, Viszeral-, Transplantations-, Gefäß- und Thoraxchirurgie, Marchioninistrasse 15, 81377 Munich, Germany.

Tel.: +49 89 44007 3964;

fax: +49 89 44007 8775;

e-mail: [email protected]

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First published: 27 June 2014
Citations: 15
Conflicts of Interest The authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

Summary

In Germany, long-term commitment of surgeons to transplantation is rare. Most surgeons leave transplant surgery after a short stint and follow careers in other surgical fields. This rapid turnover of liver transplant surgeons may result in poor resource utilization and potentially compromise patient safety. In this report, we have analyzed the caseload and the careers of 25 surgeons in liver transplantation over a period of 22 years. The median time in liver transplantation was short. Of all surgeons who engaged in liver transplantation, the median time was 3.5 years. Surgeons who completed their training remained in the field for 7 years. Surgeons who prematurely stopped their training remained for 2 years. Individual total caseloads of transplant surgeons were relatively low. The median number of procedures was 40 for all surgeons, 153 for currently active surgeons, 51 for surgeons who completed training, 27 for surgeons currently in training, and a median of four liver transplantations for surgeons who prematurely stopped liver transplantation. The vast majority (75%) of surgeons prematurely quit liver transplantation to follow alternate surgical careers. Structural changes in academic transplant surgery have to be made to facilitate long-term commitments of interested surgeons and to avoid “futile” transplant careers.

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