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Transplant Hepatology Fellowship

Program Overview

The University of Virginia’s Transplant Hepatology Fellowship Training Program is a one-year program designed to prepare physicians for a successful academic general and transplant hepatology career.

photo of UVA Medical CenterAfter completion of the fellowship, individuals will be eligible to take the ABIM Transplant Hepatology board exam and will meet the criteria to serve as a UNOS-certified primary liver transplant physician for an accredited liver transplant center in the U.S.  UVA has a multi-disciplinary, team approach to liver transplantation with close collaboration between transplant hepatology, transplant surgery services, anesthesia, and medical specialties. The transplant clinic space is shared by both services five days per week. Joint daily rounds occur on the inpatient transplant service with collaboration between hepatology and transplant surgery.

Transplant Hepatology Fellows have access to comprehensive training in transplant hepatology, advanced general hepatology, hepatology-focused endoscopy, transplant infectious diseases, hepatopathology, and interventional radiology, as well as mentoring in clinical research, advanced clinical skills, and education techniques.

The UVA Liver Transplant Program is a UNOS-accredited liver transplant program and was Virginia’s first liver transplant program. UVA draws most of its patients from the southeastern United States but also receives referrals from the greater mid-Atlantic region of New England and far west, such as California. The program offers multi-organ transplantation as well as split, domino, and living donor liver transplantation. Transplant patients are evaluated in the clinic every weekday. UVA also has a pediatric liver transplant program integrated with the Liver Transplant Program, which performs liver transplants for deceased and living donors. Adult hepatology trainees gain experience in pediatric liver disease management during joint pathology, radiology, and transplant selection conferences.

An exceptional team of Transplant Hepatologists, Drs. Curtis Argo, Zachary Henry, Nicolas Intagliata, Stephen Caldwell, Neeral Shah, and Brian Wentworth provide supervision and mentorship.

Eligibility

The training year commences in July. Candidates must have completed an ACGME-accredited Internal Medicine residency and Gastroenterology and Hepatology fellowship. The UVA Transplant Hepatology Program attracts trainees pursuing full-time Transplant Hepatology careers in academic medical centers.

Applications are completed online through the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease (AASLD). Applicants are not eligible for interviews unless the required AASLD documentation is provided. Interviews will be scheduled based on a review of completed applications and an internal ranking of competitive candidates. Candidates will be contacted by the program director/coordinator for an interview once those dates have been determined. Typically, interview days begin at 8 a.m. and are 4-5 hours long, allowing the applicant to become thoroughly acquainted with our HEP faculty and fellowship staff. Applicants are “matched” to our program via the AASLD.

For additional information, see AASLD Match and How to Apply: Hepatology Training Pathways | AASLD

Clinical Activities

Our transplant hepatology fellow participates in various clinical activities during the training year, including rotation on the inpatient liver transplant service. The patients cared for on this service are typically new transplant recipients within the first year after a liver transplant. In the inpatient service, the transplant hepatology fellow works closely with the transplant surgeons, transplant hepatologists, transplant surgery fellows, and inpatient transplant surgery teams. Throughout the year, the transplant hepatology fellow routinely rounds on inpatients in the morning with the transplant team and transplant hepatology attending physician and then transitions to an outpatient clinic or endoscopy for the remainder of the day. Outpatient clinics focus on caring for patients in all phases of the liver transplant process (pre-, peri-, and post-transplantation) with more limited exposure to advanced general hepatology patients with complicated cirrhosis care.

In addition to expected participation at our weekly hepatopathology review conference, the transplant fellow is encouraged to pursue elective experiences with interventional radiology, abdominal radiology, transplant infectious disease, transplant endocrinology, and transplant nephrology.  These experiences typically occur interspersed throughout the year and are arranged by the transplant hepatology fellow to gain broad exposure and address specific gaps in expertise and knowledge.

Clinical Research

Clinical research projects are an expectation for our transplant hepatology fellow. Balancing clinical and educational opportunities with research is important in developing an academic hepatology career. Generally, our fellow has 4-6 hours per week set aside for clinical research pursuits.