This data is for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your transplant team for decisions about your care.
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Open-data reference.
Kidney Transplant · Massachusetts
Data Insight
Brigham and Women's Hospital's kidney transplant program is one of 205 kidney programs tracked by the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) in the November 2025 Program-Specific Report cohort. The center is located in Massachusetts and reports under SRTR center code MAPB. These program-level statistics are risk-adjusted for recipient and donor characteristics, which means survival estimates account for factors such as age, diagnosis, and prior medical history rather than comparing raw outcomes.
For the current cohort, this program reports a 1-year graft survival rate of 93.6% and a 3-year rate of 90.5%, compared with a national risk-adjusted benchmark of 95.0% at 1 year. The program performed approximately 344 kidney transplants during the reporting window. An estimated 519 candidates sit on this program's waiting list, though time-to-transplant depends heavily on OPTN allocation rules for kidney, blood type, medical urgency, and geography.
Among the 205 kidney transplant programs reporting to SRTR for this cohort, Brigham and Women's Hospital ranks #155 by 1-year graft survival, placing the center 1.4 percentage points below the national benchmark. SRTR releases updated Program-Specific Reports approximately twice yearly (typically May and November), and each release incorporates a rolling cohort that may lag by 6-18 months because survival outcomes require follow-up. This page reflects the November 2025 release and is not medical advice — discuss these figures with a qualified transplant team in the context of your individual health status.
National Ranking
By 1-year graft survival rate: #155 of 205 reporting centers
Kidney Centers in Massachusetts
Other Kidney Programs
Top-ranked peer programs by 1-year graft survival rate.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the kidney transplant survival rate at Brigham and Women's Hospital?
According to SRTR data from November 2025, Brigham and Women's Hospital reports a 1-year graft survival rate of 93.6% for kidney transplants, compared to a national average of 95.0%. The 3-year survival rate is 90.5%. Survival rates are risk-adjusted estimates and may not predict individual outcomes.
How many kidney transplants does Brigham and Women's Hospital perform?
Brigham and Women's Hospital performed approximately 344 kidney transplants during the most recent SRTR reporting period. Higher transplant volume is often associated with greater center experience, though volume alone does not determine outcomes. The OPTN recommends considering multiple factors when evaluating a transplant center.
How long is the kidney transplant waiting list at Brigham and Women's Hospital?
According to the latest SRTR data, approximately 519 patients are on the kidney transplant waiting list at Brigham and Women's Hospital. Wait times depend on factors including blood type, medical urgency, body size, geographic region, and organ allocation policies set by OPTN/UNOS. Your transplant team can provide a personalized estimate.
How does Brigham and Women's Hospital rank nationally for kidney transplants?
Brigham and Women's Hospital ranks #155 out of 205 reporting kidney transplant centers nationally by 1-year graft survival rate. The center's rate is 1.4 percentage points below the national average. Rankings are based on SRTR risk-adjusted estimates and exclude centers with insufficient case volume for statistical reliability.
What should I consider before choosing Brigham and Women's Hospital for a kidney transplant?
Beyond survival statistics, important factors include the center's experience with kidney transplants, geographic proximity (which affects organ allocation timing through OPTN distribution policies), your insurance network, the multidisciplinary team's expertise, post-transplant follow-up logistics, and the availability of living donor programs if applicable. Discuss all options with your referring physician and the transplant team at Brigham and Women's Hospital.
Transplant Guides
Related Healthcare Data
Explore additional healthcare resources for Massachusetts from federal data sources.
Data Sources
- SRTR Program-Specific Reports (November 2025 release) — program-level survival rates, transplant volume, and waitlist size for Brigham and Women's Hospital. srtr.org
- OPTN kidney allocation policy — organ-specific allocation rules referenced in this page's narrative. optn.transplant.hrsa.gov
About This Data
This data is for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your transplant team for decisions about your care.
Source: SRTR Program-Specific Reports, November 2025 SRTR Program-Specific Reports, November 2025 Rankings exclude centers with insufficient case volume for statistical reporting
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.