At age 62, Beth Maley of Terrell, Texas, began experiencing severe stomach pain. She describes sitting in a business meeting with the pain so bad she would want to scream, but she held it in. Amazingly, she never missed a day of work due to the pain.
"I just kept on going until I finally said something's wrong," she says. "In early 2014, I went to my primary care physician who quickly diagnosed me with chronic pancreatitis. He told me if we didn't act quickly, I might get pancreatic cancer. I went to see my regular gastroenterologist who referred me to Baylor University Medical Center."
On March 24, 2014, Ms. Maley underwent total pancreatectomy with islet autotransplant at Baylor Dallas. This innovative procedure has been documented to be very effective in controlling pain and restoring insulin secretion in a large number of patients. Baylor University Medical Center, part of Baylor Scott & White Health, has performed over 250 islet autotransplants, placing it among the top five centers in the United States to offer this procedure in terms of the number of cases.
In this procedure, the pancreas is surgically removed and taken to the laboratory where the patient's own islet cells are extracted. The isolated islet cells are then infused into the patient's liver through the portal vein, and sometimes into the preperitoneal space, where they engraft and begin to produce insulin again. This may allow the patient to become less dependent on insulin or not dependent on insulin at all, thus avoiding a diagnosis of brittle diabetes. Importantly, the patient is relieved of much or all of the pain they had experienced.
According to Ernest Beecherl, MD, FACS, Surgical Director, Islet Autotransplantation, Baylor Dallas' glycemic control outcomes are excellent with one third of patients being insulin free at one year; another third require some supplemental insulin, while the remaining one third of patients are diabetics similar to a type 2 diabetic requiring long- and short-acting insulin.
"Once medical and endoscopic management have failed, surgery is third-line therapy," Dr. Beecherl says. "The main indication for surgery is a sufficiently poor quality of life to go through a large operation that is fraught with complications, most commonly delayed gastric emptying."
Although it took a while for Ms. Maley, now 75, to fully recover, her pancreatitis pain is gone. She did take insulin for a period of months after the transplant until the islet cells started to work. Since March 2015, she has been insulin free, and requires only a once-daily dose of sitagliptin to supplement her islet function. Ms. Maley returns to Baylor Dallas for annual follow-ups. When she was last seen in March 2024, she had no visceral pain, her weight was stable on a regular diet and her HbA1C was 5.3.
Growing our physician teams in Dallas and Fort Worth
The hepatology and abdominal transplant teams are pleased to welcome several new physicians in recent months. Yeshika Sharma, MD joins the hepatology team at Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas. Baylor Scott & White All Saints Medical Center – Fort Worth welcomes hepatologist Craig Rosenstengle MD, and two new abdominal transplant surgeons, Marc Najjar, MD and Nina Wickramaratne, MD.
Leadership and innovation in transplant care
The 40th anniversary of transplant at Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas (Baylor Dallas), part of Baylor Scott & White Health, is an opportunity to celebrate over 11,000 life-changing transplants delivered by a team who is continually innovating to deliver the best care to patients and donors.
Baylor offers patients a tool that can increase their opportunity to find a living donor
For many patients on the kidney and liver transplant wait lists, it can be years before a suitable organ from a deceased donor becomes available. An online platform designed by the Baylor Scott & White Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute is giving patients a creative tool to help them find a living donor.
Innovative approaches increase access to liver transplant for patients with low MELD scores
Historically, in any transplant program worldwide, patients had to be extremely sick and have a high Model for End-stage Liver Disease (MELD) score to receive a liver transplant. However, often the MELD score does not represent how sick the patient truly is.
Anji Wall, MD, receives prestigious award from ASTS
Anji E. Wall, MD, PhD, FACS, an abdominal transplant surgeon on the medical staff at Baylor University Medical Center, has been named the recipient of the Rising Stars in Transplantation Surgery Award from the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS).
Remarkable discovery of regeneration of islet cells from leftover tissue
Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas (Baylor Dallas), part of Baylor Scott & White Health, operates the only transplant program in Texas offering total pancreatectomy followed by islet auto-transplantation (TPIAT) for acute relapsing and chronic pancreatitis. A TPIAT is performed to alleviate the pain of chronic pancreatitis and retain the endocrine function.