NIH Clinical CenterNational Institutes of Health
HomeProfessionals/ScientistsStaffContact UsSite MapSearch
On the Frontline of Medical Discovery

New Directions for
Organ and Tissue Transplantation


Dr. Allan Kirk
Chief, Transplantation Section
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

 

Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2000 • 7 pm

Masur Auditorium•NIH Clinical Center

 Dr. Allan D. Kirk

For some patients, an organ or tissue transplant means the difference between life and death. Even after their operations, however, these patients face another danger: tissue rejection. Patients often need high doses of immunosuppressive drugs to prevent their bodies from rejecting their new tissues. But the unpleasant side effects of these drugs may cause patients to stop taking them, virtually ensuring tissue rejection.

Dr. Allan D. Kirk, a surgeon and specialist in transplantation, will speak about new ways to improve the success of organ and tissue transplantation. He began his undergraduate work at Boston University's School of Fine Arts and finished it at Old Dominion University's School of Sciences and Health Professions, earning a Bachelor of Science. He went on to Duke University, where he earned his medical degree and a doctorate in immunology. Dr. Kirk joined the United States Navy in 1983 with an Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship. Currently, he serves as a Commander in the Medical Corps of the Naval Reserves. He did his internship and residency in surgery at Duke University, becoming its Chief Resident in Surgery. Later, he traveled to the University of Wisconsin, where he was a Fellow in Transplantation and a research scientist. Dr. Kirk continues his affiliation there as a Visiting Assistant Professor of Surgery.

Since 1997, he has served as a principal investigator with the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland and as an attending surgeon with the Organ Transplant Service at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. In May 1999, he joined NIH as Chief of the Transplantation Section in the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). Dr. Kirk is the primary transplant surgeon for clinical trials being planned in the new NIH Organ/Tissue Transplant Research Center, which opened in Spring 1999 in the Clinical Center. Together with researchers from the National Naval Medical Center, NIDDK, and Walter Reed Army Medical Center, he spearheads efforts to permit transplantation without chronic immunosup-pression.

Dr. Kirk has authored or coauthored articles and book chapters on surgery and transplantation, and is a frequently invited lecturer at scientific symposia. He is a diplomate of the American Board of Surgery and an elected member of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons, American Society of Transplant Physicians, and Transplantation Society. Central to his work is the belief that tissue rejection can be reduced, so that patients need fewer immunosuppressive drugs and can enjoy more trouble-free lives.

 

Medicine for the Public home

Home | Public/Patients | Professionals/Scientists | Staff | Contact Us | Site Map | Search
For more information about the Clinical Center,
e-mail occc@cc.nih.gov, or call Clinical Center Communications, 301-496-2563.
Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, Maryland 20892-7511