This data is for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your transplant team for decisions about your care.

Organs › Intestine

Intestine Transplant Centers

National data and center-level outcomes for intestine transplants. Source: SRTR, November 2025.

Data Insight

Intestine transplants in the United States are tracked by the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) on behalf of the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN). The November 2025 Program-Specific Report cohort includes 19 active intestine transplant programs nationwide. These programs collectively reported approximately 422 intestine transplants performed during the reporting window. Each program is independently evaluated for outcomes using risk-adjusted statistical models that account for recipient characteristics, donor factors, and clinical context.

At last count, an estimated 198 candidates were listed on intestine transplant waiting lists across the United States. Time-to-transplant varies dramatically based on OPTN allocation policy specific to intestine (which incorporates medical urgency, blood type compatibility, body size, and geographic proximity to donor organs) rather than simple list position. Survival statistics published by SRTR are risk-adjusted estimates of 1-year and 3-year graft survival probability, meaning the likelihood that the transplanted organ continues functioning. These are not simple patient mortality rates and should not be interpreted as a direct ranking of center quality.

The ranked table below lists centers by risk-adjusted 1-year graft survival for the current cohort. SRTR excludes programs that did not meet minimum case-volume thresholds in order to maintain statistical reliability — those centers may still operate active intestine transplant programs but simply lack published outcome estimates for this cohort. SRTR updates these reports approximately twice yearly, so current performance may differ from figures reported here. This information is factual and informational; consult a transplant team for medical decisions.

198
On Waitlist
422
Annual Transplants
19
Active Centers

Centers with Highest 1-Year Survival Rates

Centers with insufficient case volume are excluded per SRTR methodology. Not a quality ranking.

Full ranking
Rank Center State 1-yr Survival Transplants Waitlist
1 Duke University Hospital North Carolina 100.0% 7 10
2 The Nebraska Medical Center Nebraska 100.0% 33 10
3 UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 100.0% 19 18
4 The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Ohio 87.8% 46 17
5 Jackson Memorial Hospital University of Miami School of Medicine Florida 87.4% 69 19
6 Henry Ford Hospital Michigan 85.7% 12 3
7 Georgetown University Medical Center District of Columbia 80.0% 65 18
8 Indiana University Health Indiana 72.7% 43 17
9 Mount Sinai Medical Center New York 61.5% 31 7
10 University of Illinois Medical Center Illinois 50.0% 9 2

Frequently Asked Questions

How many intestine transplants are performed each year?

According to SRTR data, approximately 422 intestine transplants are performed annually across 19 active transplant centers in the US.

How many people are on the intestine waiting list?

Approximately 198 people are currently on the intestine transplant waiting list.

What does the 1-year survival rate measure?

The 1-year graft survival rate is the estimated probability that a transplanted organ is still functioning one year after surgery. It is calculated by SRTR using risk-adjusted statistical models. Always discuss these statistics with your transplant team.

More Intestine Programs

Additional intestine transplant programs beyond the top 10.

Data Sources

  • SRTR Program-Specific Reports (November 2025 release) — national intestine transplant statistics and per-program rankings. srtr.org
  • OPTN intestine allocation policy — allocation rules governing intestine distribution. 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 per SRTR methodology