*This is an archive page. The links are no longer being updated. 1991.09.25 : Medicare Liver Transplants Contact: Bob Hardy (202) 245-6145 September 25, 1991 HHS Secretary Louis W. Sullivan, M.D., today announced the approval of eight hospitals that will provide the first adult liver transplants covered by the Medicare program. These hospitals have been approved as Medicare adult liver transplant centers because they meet specific requirements of experience and success with this surgical procedure and have an appropriate process for selecting patients for liver transplants: California-Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco, Calif. University of Wisconsin Hospitals, Madison, Wis. University of Michigan Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Mich. University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Neb. UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles, Calif. University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pa. The Hospital of the University of California at San Francisco. Rush-Presbyterian Hospital, St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Ill. Secretary Sullivan said 31 hospitals have submitted applications to be designated Medicare adult liver transplant centers, and the applications of 23 are still under review. Medicare will not pay for adult liver transplants unless they are performed in approved centers. "Our criteria for approval of these centers are designed to ensure that Medicare beneficiaries receive the highest quality of institutional and professional care when they receive liver transplants," the secretary said. The announcement that Medicare would begin to cover adult liver transplants was made in a proposed notice published in the Federal Register March 8, 1990. Medicare will pay for liver transplants performed since that date in five of the eight hospitals, because it was documented that the five hospitals met the criteria by March 8, 1990. The three with different effective dates are, California- Pacific Medical Center, for transplants performed after Dec. 26, 1990; University of California at San Francisco, for transplants performed after Aug. 20, 1990; and Rush-Presbyterian Hospital, for transplants performed after April 30, *This is an archive page. The links are no longer being updated. 1991. Gail R. Wilensky, Ph.D., administrator of the Health Care Financing Administration, said that "our decision to cover adult liver transplants was based on research findings that the procedure has advanced beyond the experimental phase and is safe and effective for specific conditions. We are pleased that this life-saving technology can now be made available to Medicare beneficiaries in appropriate facilities." She said the Medicare adult liver transplant program is similar to the five-year-old Medicare program for heart transplants. Forty-nine hospitals have been approved as Medicare heart transplant centers. To be approved as a Medicare adult liver transplant center, a hospital must document a one-year survival rate of 77 percent and a two-year survival rate of 60 percent for adults who have had liver transplants to treat specified conditions. The seven conditions for which Medicare will pay for adult liver transplants are primary biliary cirrhosis; primary sclerosing cholangitis; postnecrotic cirrhosis, hepatitis B surface antigen negative; alcoholic cirrhosis; Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency disease; Wilson's disease and primary hemochromatosis. ###