Skip to main content

Treatment

Kidney Transplantation

Key Points about Kidney Transplants in Children

  • A kidney transplant is surgery to place a healthy kidney from another person into someone with severe kidney problems.
  • Transplanted organs can come from deceased or living donors — and you could be a match.
  • You and your child will work with a comprehensive kidney transplant team before, during and after the process which will include evaluations, diagnostic tests and a period of waiting for the right match.
  • Living with a transplant is a lifelong process. Antirejection medicine (immunosuppressants) must be taken for the rest of your child’s life.

Frequently Asked Questions

 

About Kidney Transplants

What is a kidney transplant?

Why is a kidney transplant recommended?

Where do transplanted organs come from?

Waiting for a Kidney Transplant

What is the transplant waiting list?

How is my child placed on the waiting list for a new kidney?

How long will it take to get a new kidney?

How are we notified when a kidney is available?

Kidney Transplant Surgery

What is involved in kidney transplant surgery?

What does postoperative care for kidney transplant involve?

What is rejection?

What are the symptoms of rejection?

What is done to prevent rejection?

What about infection?

What is the long-term outlook for a child after a kidney transplant?

Providers of Kidney Transplantation

Departments that Offer Kidney Transplantation

    Kidney Transplantation

    The Kidney Transplantation Program is the only one of its kind in the Washington, D.C., area focused on the needs of children and teens with kidney disease. Additionally, it is the region's only Medicare-approved center for kidney transplants in children and teens.