Gaetano Ciancio | |
---|---|
Born | Roccapiemonte, Italy |
Education | MD (1982), MBA (2001) |
Alma mater | Central University of Venezuela University of Miami's Jackson Memorial Hospital |
Occupation(s) | Transplant surgeon, urologic oncologist |
Gaetano Ciancio is an Italian American surgeon at the University of Miami who specializes in kidney transplant. He is the chief medical and academic officer of the Miami Transplant Institute and the director of its Kidney & Kidney-Pancreas Programs.[1] His most significant contributions to medicine are related to surgically treating kidney cancer once it has spread to the inferior vena cava[2][3] and in optimizing the immunosuppression protocol after kidney transplant.[4]
Ciancio was born on June 15, 1956, in Roccapiemonte, Italy. He received his Doctor of Medicine from Central University of Venezuela, then completed his residency at the University of Miami's Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami,[1][5] followed by completing a fellowship in multiorgan transplant surgery.[5]
Ciancio developed techniques for the surgical resection of large kidney tumors.[6] His results demonstrated that by performing a liver mobilization, urological oncologists could avoid a thoracic incision in many patients [7]
Building on the techniques described for resecting large renal tumors, Ciancio adapted his liver mobilization technique to address retrohepatic or even suprahepatic inferior vena caval thrombus associated with renal tumors.[3]
Together with his long time collaborator Mark Soloway, they published a step-by-step guide toward resecting renal cell carcinoma with associated inferior vena cava thrombus.[8]
Ciancio helped develop and popularize alternative immunosuppression regimens which successfully lowered the dose of immunosuppressants without increasing organ rejection.[9][10][11]
During kidney transplantation, the most common arterial reconstruction is for a single renal artery to be anastomosed to the external iliac artery.[12][13] Ciancio has popularized several techniques for dealing with anatomical variations, including the usage of the inferior epigastric artery to anastomose to a small upper-pole artery.[14]
Additionally, Ciancio has been part of the Miami Transplant Team that developed the bladder patch technique, where for various indications the kidney together with the ureter and some amount of donor bladder are transplanted en-bloc.[15]
Together with George Burke, Ciancio has made contributions to the field of pancreas transplantations both regarding management of surgical complications and immunosuppression strategies, including publishing a technique for thrombectomy for complete venous thrombosis of the transplanted pancreas.[16]
In 2013, he served as President of the Urologic Society for Transplantation and Renal Surgery.[17] He was knighted in Italy by Sergio Mattarella and is a member of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic[18]