HERSHEY, Pa. — Ninety-seven percent of all patients who receive a heart transplant at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center survive for at least one year post-surgery. That’s above the U.S. average of 91% and ranks as the highest one-year survival rate among all transplant centers statewide, according to the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR).
SRTR data, collected by the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network and covering January 2018 to December 2019, also shows that the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center heart transplant program achieves:
- A 100% one-month post-surgery survival rate (U.S. average: 96%)
- A transplant rate of 133.1 transplants per 100 person years on the transplant list, which ranks at 55% above expected. That rate is an indicator of the program’s success in getting patients their needed heart transplant
The results come as no surprise to heart transplant survivor Brandon Seiber, age 22, of Enola and his grandmother, Cindy Gates. Seiber, who lost his mother from vulvar cancer in April 2019, fell ill while vacationing with his family in Virginia Beach, Virginia, three months later. He was rushed to a local hospital. “Doctors said his heart was only beating at 12.5%, and that he had 30 pounds of fluid around his heart,” Gates said.
Once back in Pennsylvania, Seiber became bedridden. In August 2019, an ambulance rushed him to Hershey Medical Center, where heart transplant cardiologist Dr. John Boehmer assessed his condition and recommended him for a transplant. “It only took about a week for them to find a heart that would work for me,” Seiber said.