Skip to main content
Home
  • Healthcare
    • Specialties
      • Cardiovascular Care
      • Oncology
      • Neurosurgery
      • Primary Care
      • View All Specialties >
    • For Health Professionals
      • Refer a Patient
      • Clinical Trials
      • Professional Development
      • View All >
    • For Patients & Visitors
      • MyChart Login
      • Accepted Insurance
      • Pay My Bill
      • Patient Information
      • View All >
    • Clinical Trials
      • Autism
      • Cancer
      • Obesity
      • Substance Abuse
      • View All Clinical Trials >
    • Find a Doctor
    • Make an Appointment

    General Inquiries

    Call today to schedule an appointment or fill out an online request form. If requested before 2 p.m. you will receive a response today.

    CALL

    713-798-1000

    Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.


    ONLINE

    Request Now

    Request non-urgent appointments

    Request an appointment, learn about your rights as a patient, read about what to expect from your appointment, and more.

    As Houston's premier academic medical practice, Baylor Medicine delivers compassionate, innovative, evidence-based care.
    Find a Doctor

  • Education
    • Degree Programs & Admissions
      • M.D. Program
      • Ph.D. Programs
      • DNP Program (Nurse Anesthesia)
      • Genetic Counseling Program
      • P.A. Program
      • Orthotics & Prosthetics Program
      • Baccalaureate/M.D. Programs
      • Dual Degree Programs
      • View All Programs >
    • Financing Your Education
      • Tuition & Fees
      • Financial Aid
      • CARES ACT
    • Schools
      • School of Medicine
      • Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
      • National School of Tropical Medicine
      • School of Health Professions
    • Advanced Training Programs
      • Residency Programs
      • Clinical Fellowships
      • Postdoctoral Research Positions
      • Continuing Professional Development
      • Diploma in Tropical Medicine
      • View All >
    • Resources
      • Departments
      • Academic Centers
      • Academic Calendars
      • Education Cores
      • View All >
    • Information For...
      • Students
      • Postdoctoral Researchers
      • Faculty
      • Alumni
    get-to-know-houston

    America's fourth-largest city is a great place to live, work, and play. Find out why.
    Get to Know Houston

  • Research
    • Research Offices
      • Advanced Technology Cores
      • Clinical Research
      • Institute for Clinical & Translational Research
      • Office of Research Leadership
      • Research IT
      • Sponsored Programs
    • Research at Baylor
      • Academic Centers
      • Departments
      • Faculty Labs
      • From the Labs
      • News
      • Our Research
      • Research Centers
      • Strategic Research Center
    • Additional Research Services
      • BCM Innovation Institute
      • Service Labs
      • VIICTR
    get-to-know-houston

    America's fourth-largest city is a great place to live, work, and play. Find out why.
    Get to Know Houston

  • Community
    • Healthcare Outreach
      • Community Programs
      • More >
    • Global Outreach
      • Global Health
      • Global Programs >
    • Educational Outreach
      • SMART Program
      • BioEd Online
      • More >
    • General Resources
      • Community Events
      • News
      • Blogs
      • Baylor in the Community
    get-to-know-houston

    America's fourth-largest city is a great place to live, work, and play. Find out why.
    Get to Know Houston

  • About
    • About Us
      • Academic Centers
      • Alumni
      • Careers
      • Departments
      • Giving
      • Leadership
      • Mission, Vision, Values
      • News
      • Our Affiliates
      • Fast Facts
      • Accreditation
    • Offices
      • President's Office
      • Office of Research
      • Ombuds Office
      • BCM Innovation Institute
      • View All >
    • Our Campus
      • Compliance
      • Safety and Security
      • Resource Stewardship & Sustainability
      • Team Shop
      • Find a Person
    get-to-know-houston

    America's fourth-largest city is a great place to live, work, and play. Find out why.
    Get to Know Houston

  • GIVE
  • CAREERS
  • INTRANET
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • News
Department of Medicine
  • Meet Our Team
  • Sections
  • Education
  • Research
  • Healthcare
  • News
  • Meet Our Team
  • Sections
  • Education
  • Research
  • Healthcare
  • News
  1. Baylor College of Medicine
  2. Departments
  3. Medicine
  4. Sections
  5. Gastroenterology and Hepatology
  6. Education
  7. Transplant Hepatology Fellowship
  8. Curriculum
  • Curriculum
  • Faculty

Transplant Hepatology Fellowship Curriculum

Our curriculum is predicated on ACGME core requirements for Transplant Hepatology and ABIM board certification. Curriculum is designed for Transplant Hepatology fellows to:

  • Train in a world-class, caring, accessible environment for the diagnosis and medical, surgical and radiological treatment of all hepatobiliary diseases afflicting adults.
  • Participate fully in a multidepartmental, multidisciplinary, multi-institutional team effort of physicians, surgeons, nurses, clinician investigators and trainees to care for adult patients with hepatobiliary diseases.
  • Excel in providing the pre-operative and post-operative care required for the success of life-saving liver transplantation alone or in combination with other vital organs, including kidney, heart and lung.
  • Excel in non-transplant surgical and radiological care of patients with primary and secondary hepatobiliary malignancies.
  • Ensure a seamless transition of older pediatric patients to the care of adult hepatologists

Rotations

Baylor College of Medicine hepatologists and transplant surgeons provide training in both the outpatient clinics of the Baylor St. Luke's Liver Center and inpatient services of the Baylor St. Luke's Medical Center. Our transplant surgeons perform orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) at the Baylor St. Luke's Medical Center, Texas Children's Hospital, and the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center.

Baylor faculty hepatologists and transplant surgeons provide training in consultative care of patients with hepatobiliary diseases. The Baylor St. Luke's Liver Center is a state-of-the-art outpatient facility for outpatient clinical care. Hepatology and Liver Transplantation fellows participate in four half-day outpatient clinics devoted to new patient evaluations. One of the half-day clinics is devoted to UNOS-listed pre-OLT and care of post-OLT patients.

The full-time hepatology faculty provides supervision and teaching for Hepatology and Liver Transplantation fellows for each patient. Educational emphases include diagnosis and management of adult patients with acute and chronic liver diseases, inclusion and exclusion criteria for OLT, immunosuppression for autoimmune diseases and post-OLT patients, management of complications of post-OLT patients, and effective oral and written communication with patients, families, staff and referring healthcare providers.

We advocate cost-effective and evidence-based use of diagnostic testing, implementation of published guidelines, and evidence-based practices in all protocols.

Baylor full-time hepatologists and transplant surgeons provide consultative inpatient care. Consultative inpatient training of Transplant Hepatology fellows, medical residents, medical students, and NP/PAs is directly supervised by full-time hepatology faculty on a daily basis. Each of our triple-certified hepatology faculty members rotates on the inpatient service for seven consecutive days. During this time, the faculty has no competing outpatient responsibilities and devotes their full attention to teaching and supervision.

Education is also provided to trainees by our team’s designated consultants in cardiology, pulmonology, nephrology, oncology, infectious diseases, endocrinology, therapeutic endoscopy and invasive radiology. All of our consultants are board-certified in their specialties. Fellows perform comprehensive initial consultations under direct daily supervision of an attending faculty hepatologist. They conduct daily follow-up assessments of all inpatients and discuss each patient daily with the hepatology attending, who independently sees and examines each patient, reviews all data and provides bedside teaching.

Fellows are taught the indications, contraindications, limitations, complications, and interpretation of percutaneous and transjugular liver biopsies, diagnostic and large volume paracentesis with albumin replacement, assessment of esophageal varices using EGD, therapeutic endoscopy for upper gastrointestinal bleeding, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunts, 2D echocardiography with agitated saline to detect pulmonary vascular shunts and right heart catheterization to assess pulmonary hypertension and portal systemic venous pressure gradients.

Fellows are also trained to perform diagnostic and therapeutic paracentesis, with and without US localization, in our outpatient procedure center. Fellows are also eligible for training in percutaneous liver biopsy. Faculty hepatologists supervise all procedures.

Fellows are on-call every third weekend. The call schedule includes major holidays. Fellows on the inpatient service rotation do not remain in the hospital overnight and do not take first or second night call. Only full-time hepatology and transplant surgical faculty members take calls after hours and on weekends to ensure timely decision making.

This policy ensures that our fellows have adequate time for educational, scholarly activities and needed rest. We encourage our fellows to devote a minimum of one hour per day to self-education after hours.

Didactic

As part of the didactic curriculum, the program provides monthly conferences, including journal clubs, weekly conferences, and Grand Rounds.

Liver Forum

This seminar on an invited topic is conducted during a dinner, which is open to members of both the academic and practice communities.

Gastroenterology Journal Club

Two articles selected by the faculty are presented by trainees for group discussion at a dinner conference. Transplant Hepatology Fellows are included in rotation with Gastroenterology Fellows. Fellows present articles and prepare detailed handouts.

Hepatology Journal Club

This weekly journal club is held 7-8 a.m. Mondays and is devoted to a critical presentation by a fellow of one article in hepatology or liver transplantation. Each presentation is mentored by a hepatology faculty member. To prepare fellows for the challenges of practice in the era of translational medicine, we give special emphasis to genetics, proteonomics, metabolomics and immunology and inflammation. Clinical articles informing and extending information published in Practice Guidelines are also a priority.

Hepatology Seminar

This lecture-based seminar, held at noon on Mondays, is a forum for presentation of a variety of topics spanning basic, clinical and translational research applications to clinical issues in hepatology and liver transplantation.

Research Meeting

This 1.5 hour meeting is held on Tuesdays 7:30-9 a.m. The first 30 minutes is a forum for faculty and fellows to discuss progress in research projects and facilitate collaborations and mentoring. The next hour is devoted to clinical research in Advanced Liver Therapies, including vetting of new research protocols, systematic review of all patients in current clinical trials, site initiation training sessions for newly funded research protocols, and didactic teaching about compliance, regulatory issues and the conduct of clinical research.

Hepatology Case Conference

In this conference, held at noon on Wednesdays, a fellow discusses a difficult and/or informative clinical case with mentorship from a hepatology faculty member. Cases are selected to illustrate important principles and provide new updates from the literature.

Imaging Conference

This conference, held from 7-8 a.m. Thursdays, is devoted to the review of imaging studies performed on our patients with a special emphasis hepatobiliary neoplasia. It is conducted by senior interventional radiologists and attended by faculty in hepatology and liver transplant surgery, rotating medical residents and fellows in hepatology and liver transplantation and gastroenterology. Formal reviews are conducted and recommendations are made regarding OLT, resective and biliary reconstructive surgery, ablative procedures and chemotherapy for malignant tumors. Attendees acquire in depth knowledge of imaging techniques, interpretation, ancillary testing options and use of imaging in clinical decisions.

Gastroenterology Grand Rounds

This CME conference is held 8-9 a.m. Thursdays. Two 30-minute presentations are made; those devoted to the liver are scheduled to be presented second to accommodate walking time from the Imaging Conference.

Gastroenterology Grand Rounds

This CME conference is held 8-9 a.m. Thursdays. Two 30-minute presentations are made; those devoted to the liver are scheduled to be presented second to accommodate walking time from the Imaging Conference.

Medicine Grand Rounds

The Department of Medicine conducts Grand Rounds on Thursdays from 12:15-1 p.m. Fellows and faculty are encouraged to attend those related to hepatobiliary topics.

Gastroenterology Research Forum

This basic and clinical research seminar is held on Thursdays from 4-5 p.m. Invited speakers present results of research in gastroenterology and hepatology. Fellows and faculty are encouraged to attend lectures related to hepatology and liver transplantation.

Medical Review Board

This meeting, held on Fridays from 7-8:30 a.m., is a formal patient selection conference for our OLT program. It is attended by transplant surgeons, all transplant hepatologists, transplant consultants in psychiatry, cardiology, nephrology, transplant nurse coordinators, social workers, dietician and fellows in hepatology and liver transplantation and gastroenterology. Each candidate for OLT listing is presented and discussed in detail and consensus decisions are made. Patients whose circumstances have changed are also represented.

Hepatopathology Conference

This conference is conducted from 1-2 p.m. Fridays by a faculty hepatopathologist who projects, reviews and discusses liver biopsy slides generated by us or sent from outside institutions. In addition, we review OLT explants, hepatobiliary resections. This conference emphasizes critical appraisal and appreciation of the role of liver biopsy in formulating a diagnostic and therapeutic plan.

Research

Basic science research is conducted in laboratories located in the School of Medicine, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Texas Children’s Hospital Research Center. Fellows with particular expertise and interest are encouraged to attend seminars and laboratory meetings in their field of interest. However, no time is allocated for fellows to conduct independent, basic science research.

Advanced Liver Therapies, our program’s clinical research center, is directed by John M. Vierling, M.D., who serves as principal investigator for sponsored studies with all hepatology faculty members serving as sub-investigators. The staff includes an administrator, regulatory specialist, several full-time research coordinators and a laboratory and drug dispensing coordinator.

Facilities include examination rooms, sample preparation rooms, -80 degree Celsius freezers, conference rooms and consultation rooms. Investigator-initiated and industry-sponsored phase I-III trials are conducted on-site or at any of the hospitals staffed by BCM faculty. John A. Goss, M.D., program director for Liver Transplantation is the Principal Investigator for trials involving post-OLT immunosuppression or other therapies.

Fellows participate in clinical research by reviewing new and ongoing studies weekly during the research conference, assessing inclusion and exclusion criteria for studies in patients seen in the inpatient and outpatient settings, learning the basics of regulatory requirements and preparation of IRB submissions and performing clinical examinations of selected research patients.

We encourage each fellow to identify at least one specific topic of personal interest and to work closely with faculty mentors to formulate scholarly projects that can be finalized and submitted for publication within the 12-month training period. In addition, fellows are often invited by faculty members to co-author invited reviews and book chapters.

Transplant Hepatology Fellowship
  • Curriculum
  • Faculty

Transplant Hepatology Fellowship

Phone 713–798–3802
Fax 713–798–0223
Email stevenso@bcm.edu

Transplant Hepatology Fellowship

6620 Main Street Suite 1425  Houston, TX 77030

Related Links

Michael E. DeBakey Department of Surgery
Graduate Medical Education

Connect with us

Follow Us facebook twitter youtube linkedin instagram rss 

Footer Menu Healthcare

  • Healthcare
    • Specialties
    • MyChart Login
    • For Patients & Visitors
    • For Health Professionals
    • Clinical Trials
    • Find a Physician

Footer Menu Education

  • Education
    • Programs & Admissions
    • Student & Trainee Resources
    • Faculty Resources
    • School of Medicine
    • Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
    • National School of Tropical Medicine
    • School of Health Professions
    • Tuition & Fees
    • Financial Aid

Footer Menu Research

  • Research
    • Our Research
    • Core Labs
    • Faculty Labs
    • Research Centers
    • Research Offices

Footer Menu Community

  • Community
    • Healthcare Outreach
    • Education Outreach
    • Global Programs
    • Community Events

Footer Menu About

  • About
    • Our Campus
    • Departments
    • Academic Centers
    • Administrative Offices
    • Affiliates
    • Leadership
    • Giving
    • Alumni

Footer Menu Resource Links

  • Resource Links
    • Contact Us
    • Find a Person
    • Careers
    • BCM Team Shop
    • News
    • Title IX Office
    • Compliance
    • Covid Response Site

©1998-2026 Baylor College of Medicine® | 1 Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030 | 713-798-4951
Have an edit or suggestion for this page?

  • Compliance
  • Privacy
  • Intranet