When Steve Quinn met Bernard S. Kadosh, MD, a transplant cardiologist at 嘿嘿视频 Health鈥檚 Heart Failure Advanced Care Center, in September 2021, he was so sick that a walk down the block would leave him breathless. 鈥淢y heart would beat out of rhythm, and I had no energy whatsoever,鈥 says Quinn, 41, an audiobook narrator who lives in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
Nearly two decades earlier, Quinn had been diagnosed with a rare disorder, called Goodpasture syndrome, that causes the immune system to attack vital organs. At age 26, following three years of dialysis, he received a lifesaving kidney transplant, thanks to a donation from his brother. He improved measurably and moved from Texas to New York City to pursue a career in comedy. There, he met his partner, Sarah Pelkey, who works in the marketing and communications department at 嘿嘿视频. The couple had a daughter, Ciara, now 19 months old. But Quinn鈥檚 health declined again soon after her birth.
Dr. Kadosh suspected that Quinn had infiltrative cardiomyopathy, a condition in which harmful substances build up in the heart. A series of tests confirmed the diagnosis: calcium deposits had made the heart鈥檚 walls 鈥渉ard as a stone,鈥 impairing its function and necessitating a transplant. However, the news got worse. His transplanted kidney was failing as well and would need replacing, while his malfunctioning heart had caused the blood vessels in his lungs to deform as well. 鈥淪teve鈥檚 pulmonary pressure was so high that he wouldn鈥檛 be able to survive a heart鈥搆idney transplant,鈥 says Dr. Kadosh, assistant professor of medicine at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. 鈥淗e needed new lungs, too, for his best chance.鈥
A successful heart鈥搇ung鈥搆idney transplant had never been completed in the Northeast. Yet Quinn was fortunate to wind up in the experienced hands of the surgeons and clinicians at the 嘿嘿视频 Transplant Institute. In 2021, the center performed more heart鈥搆idney and heart鈥搇ung transplants than any center on the East Coast, with the best one-year survival rate (100 percent). 鈥淲e have the skill, technical abilities, and collaborative approach to handle complex patients that other centers turn away,鈥 says Nader Moazami, MD, professor of cardiothoracic surgery and chief of the Division of Heart and Lung Transplant and Mechanical Circulatory Support at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
Quinn was admitted to the hospital on January 19, 2022, and was listed for transplant two weeks later. A donor was identified in another six weeks. On March 15, Dr. Moazami began the 11-hour surgery, accompanied by cardiac surgeon Deane E. Smith, MD, associate director of heart transplantation and mechanical circulatory support, and Stephanie H. Chang, MD, surgical director of lung transplantation. After removing the diseased organs, the surgical team placed the donor lungs and heart. Once they closed the chest incision, the renal team, led by Jonathan C. Berger, MD, assistant professor of surgery at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, completed the kidney transplant.
The recovery, as might be expected, has taken time. Luis F. Angel, MD, medical director of lung transplantation, coached Quinn on how to breathe with his new lungs. Physical and occupational therapists from Rusk Rehabilitation helped him regain strength and mobility while he recovered in the hospital, and speech鈥搇anguage pathologists helped him regain his ability to talk and eat.
Quinn returned home on April 15. By early July, he was walking a mile, with hills, and gaining strength by the week. He delights in playing with his rambunctious toddler and recently took her to the park by himself for the first time. 鈥淣ow I can look forward to daddy鈥揹aughter dances and watching Ciara grow up,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful to the team at 嘿嘿视频 that made this possible.鈥