Vietnamese doctors successfully perform first heart-kidney transplant

The first heart and kidney transplant on one patient in Vietnam was successfully performed on February 15 by doctors of the Vietnam-Germany Friendship Hospital, the hospital announced on February 24.
Vietnamese doctors successfully perform first heart-kidney transplant ảnh 1Doctors of the Vietnam – Germany Friendship Hospital perform the transplant on February 15. (Photo: VietnamPlus)

Hanoi (VNA) - The first heart and kidney transplant on one patient in Vietnam was successfully performed on February 15 by doctors of the Vietnam-Germany Friendship Hospital, the hospital announced on February 24.

The transplanted organs were taken from a brain-dead donor.

Associate Professor Nguyen Huu Uoc, director of the hospital’s Cardiovascular and Thoracic Centre, said the patient who received the organs is a 37-year-old man living in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai. He suffered from dilated cardiomyopathy, heart failure and severe arrhythmias, leading to end-stage renal failure.

He underwent hemodialysis continuously for five to six years and often received emergency treatment at major cardiovascular centres in Ho Chi Minh City and Thua Thien-Hue province.

Due to ineffective treatment, he was instructed by doctors to have a heart and kidney transplant.

In mid-2022, he was introduced to the Vietnam-Germany Friendship Hospital. After careful evaluation, the hospital's experts agreed to perform a simultaneous heart and kidney transplant for the patient with donated organs from a brain-dead donor.

Transplanting both organs at the same time is a big challenge, requiring doctors to be well prepared, Uoc said.

In six months since the transplantation decision was made, no donated brain-dead organ truly matched, and the patient had to continue to visit hospitals for heart and kidney treatment.

In early February 2023, one woman who had a brain death due to a severe traumatic brain injury after a traffic accident donated multiple organs with family consensus.

Vietnamese doctors successfully perform first heart-kidney transplant ảnh 2The patient after the transplant (Photo: VietnamPlus)


The transplant surgery lasted for 10 hours from 9am to 7pm on February 15 with the participation of doctors from five centres and clinical departments.

It took the team three hours to take out the organs, five hours to transplant the heart and two hours to transplant the kidney.

“The transplantation was performed successfully thanks to skillful cooperation between heart, kidney transplant and anaesthesia resuscitation technicians as well as careful preparation of medical facilities and advanced equipment,” said Professor Tran Binh Giang, the hospital’s director.

Vietnamese doctors successfully perform first heart-kidney transplant ảnh 3Vietnam has made great stride in organ transplant. (Photo: VietnamPlus)

The patient’s heart and kidney recovered fully on February 24, eight days after the transplant.

He can sit up, eat and communicate without special assistance.

He will undergo further post-transplant treatment in the next few weeks.

This was the first time Vietnamese doctors have successfully performed a transplant of heart and kidney organs on one patient.

Vietnamese doctors have performed two organ transplants on one patient three times.

Two years ago, the Vietnam-Germany Hospital doctors conducted a liver and kidney transplant on a patient.

Heart-kidney transplantation technique has been performed in countries with a developed medical system. The US has carried out more than 100 heart-kidney transplants each year.

The Vietnam-Germany Hospital led the country in organ transplants and has performed more than 1,500 of these surgeries.

About 6,500 organ transplants have been carried out in Vietnam since the first in 1992, showing great efforts by the entire health sector, but the figure is still modest compared to other countries, an official has said.

At present, 95% of the transplants in the country use organs from living donors and only 5 per cent from brain-dead donors, which runs counter to the global trend, in which the majority are transplants from brain-dead donors.

In Vietnam, an estimated 10 people die each day while waiting for organ transplants. Meanwhile, it is worrying that less than 30% of doctors and 20% of nurses have gained a sufficient understanding of brain death, and many do not have any knowledge about this.

These are challenges that must be addressed, and the system of 22 organ transplant centres along with hospitals nationwide needs to make changes to encourage brain-dead organ donations, he said.

The National Coordinating Centre for Human Organ Transplants is the first unit in the country to form a list of patients waiting for transplants, and nearly 50,000 people have registered for organ donation after death or brain death./.

VNA

See more

Students play football during a break atthe Hai Xuan Secondary School in Ninh Binh province . (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam targets annual health screening for all students by 2030

By 2030, all educational institutions are expected to have separate medical rooms equipped with essential medicines and healthcare equipment, adequate access to safe drinking water and sanitation facilities, and school meal services that comply with food safety regulations.

Staff from the Ho Chi Minh City First Aid Centre demonstrate first aid skills. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam, France cooperate to build community first-aid network

The agreement focuses on establishing hundreds of first-aid stations across Long Chau’s pharmacy and vaccination network, standardising first-aid training for medical and pharmaceutical students, and expanding community health education activities nationwide.

In Hanoi, the temperature recorded in Lang Ha at 1 pm on May 26 reached 40 degrees Celsius. (Photo: VNA)

Proactive response needed to cope with extreme weather: Experts

Health experts warned that prolonged heat exposure could cause heatstroke, heat exhaustion and other serious health conditions. High-risk groups include the elderly, children, pregnant women, people working or exercising outdoors for long periods, and those suffering from chronic illnesses such as hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma and diabetes.

Ho Chi Minh City plans over 95 million USD for universal health screenings in 2026. (Illustrative photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City earmarks over 95 million USD for universal health screenings in 2026

Ho Chi Minh City's free health examination programme, set to begin on May 25, is carried out at qualified healthcare facilities, mobile clinics at schools, factories and businesses, community-based screening sites arranged by local authorities, as well as through home visits to elderly residents, people living alone and those with limited mobility.

Healthcare workers are employed in an isolation and treatment area for patients infected with the Ebola virus in Entebbe, Uganda. (Photo: Xinhua/VNA)

Health Ministry calls for stronger preparedness against Ebola

Medical facilities were instructed to strengthen surveillance, especially for individuals who have travelled to or returned from outbreak-hit countries or areas within the previous 21 days. They were also asked to strictly enforce infection control measures, including protective procedures, screening, triage and isolation protocols for suspected or confirmed Ebola cases.

Party General Secretary and State President To Lam speaks at a working session Party Committee of the Ministry of Health on Vietnamese traditional medicine in Hanoi on May 20 (Photo: VNA)

Top leader calls for historic transformation of traditional medicine

Highlighting strategic orientations for the sector, Party General Secretary and State President To Lam requested that traditional medicine be incorporated into the country’s overall development strategy in the new era. He called for the building of a national traditional medicine ecosystem linked to the development of the health economy and national soft power.

Deputy Prime Minister Pham Thi Thanh Tra speaks at the programme “Organ and Tissue Donation Day May 20 – Giving is Forever”. (Photo: VNA)

Deputy PM calls for stronger organ donation movement to save more lives

Vietnam has gradually mastered some of the world’s most complex transplant techniques since the country’s first successful kidney transplant in 1992. As of 2025, Vietnam had conducted 10,878 organ transplants, with 34 licensed hospitals now capable of performing transplant procedures.

The meeting between the delegation from Military Hospital 175 and Mayor of Leipzig Burkhard Jung at Leipzig City Hall (Photo: VNA)

Healthcare cooperation shines in Vietnam – Germany ties

The partnership between Military Hospital 175 and medical institutions in Leipzig has been recognised as a highlight of Vietnam – Germany healthcare cooperation, as well as of the sister-city relationship between Ho Chi Minh City and Leipzig.

Dr Truong Thanh Tinh, head of the Department of Neurosurgery under the University Medical Centre Ho Chi Minh City, gives a post-surgery check-up on the 12-year-old patient. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam performs first awake brain surgery on child patient

The hospital announced on May 19 that the patient, a 12-year-old boy, recovered well after surgery, remained fully conscious and showed no new focal neurological deficits. Post-operative imaging indicated that the tumour had been almost completely removed. Doctors are continuing close monitoring and preparing further treatment plans to support the child’s full recovery.

Ho Chi Minh City steps up surveillance to prevent Ebola risk

Ho Chi Minh City steps up surveillance to prevent Ebola risk

Under the directive, the Ho Chi Minh City Centre for Disease Control has been instructed to tighten surveillance at border gates by monitoring incoming travellers for unusual health symptoms, carefully reviewing epidemiological factors, travel histories and accommodation records, and coordinating closely with aviation, maritime and international health quarantine authorities to promptly detect suspected cases.

A long-term strategy for a healthier Vietnam

A long-term strategy for a healthier Vietnam

Resolution No. 72-NQ/TW of the Politburo underscores the pivotal role of physical exercise and sports as a breakthrough solution, shifting the mindset from “treatment” to “proactive health protection and improvement.”

Healthcare workers administer Ebola vaccines to residents in Kampala, Uganda. (Photo: Xinhua/VNA)

Ministry of Health steps up surveillance amid Ebola risk

The Ministry of Health said it is closely monitoring developments, regularly updating information from WHO and national focal points implementing the International Health Regulations, while strengthening surveillance at medical facilities and health quarantine measures at border gates.